Diet soda
Re: Diet soda
Yes, the article is right. Moreover, there are other health Problems that can be caused by sweetners. It is known for example that they cause obesity.
Re: Diet soda
I'd agree if the statement had been "can help cause obesity", but I'm not at all sure that triggering the desire for more food is the problem, because over-eating is really a choice, isn't it? If there are reputable studies on artificial sweeteners shown to cause weight gain I've missed them, but they've been suspected for some time.AnotherGuy wrote:Yes, the article is right. Moreover, there are other health Problems that can be caused by sweetners. It is known for example that they cause obesity.
My main problem with the article is the wording. As an example:
What constitutes "good dental hygiene" and what do they mean by "constant exposure"? Granted, two liters per day sounds like a lot to me, but one woman isn't much of a sample.HealthDay wrote: The acid in soda is in the form of citric acid and phosphoric acid, Bassiouny said. Without good dental hygiene, constant exposure can cause erosion and significant oral damage, he said.
In his study, he found that a woman in her 30s who drank 2 liters of diet soda daily for three to five years experienced tooth rot and decay remarkably similar to that suffered by a 29-year-old methamphetamine addict and a 51-year-old habitual crack cocaine user.
Reports and studies on potential health concerns can be valuable guideposts, but hyperbole and overly-liberal interpretations tend to diminish their effectiveness and can do more harm than good. Just my two satang.
My blog: http://khunbaobao.blogspot.com/
Re: Diet soda
Of course, over-eating is a choice but it is a fact that sweeteners cause obesity. The explanation is simple. They are far sweeter than sugar. Thus insulin-secretion is induced. The result is ravenous appetite and hunger. Hardly anyone can refrain from eating if that happens. So sweeteners help you gaining weight.
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Re: Diet soda
I find it difficult to see a connection between artificial sweeteners and obesity. Artificial sweeteners taste sweet, but have no or very little nutricial value (calories). The sweet taste is caused by binding to some receptors in the tongue, I don't know if they cause production of insulin as well (that would be different receptors in the stomach). If it did, it would defy their purpose and I can't immagine they would have been approved.
Re: Diet soda
this is very misleading reporting - the original article in the journal "General Dentistry" was titled "Dental erosion due to abuse of illicit drugs and acidic carbonated beverages"
Dental erosion due to abuse of illicit drugs and acidic carbonated beverages
but here the topic title is "Diet Soda", the quoted article title is "Diet Soda Habit as Bad for Teeth as Meth Addiction, Study Claims"
from the quoted article and the original journal article the dental damage is caused by the acidity of the soda not the sweetener used - sugar or artificial!
isn't the Internet a great place to get your health information from when you don't consider the reliability and authority of the articles you read or quote from!
bkkguy
Dental erosion due to abuse of illicit drugs and acidic carbonated beverages
but here the topic title is "Diet Soda", the quoted article title is "Diet Soda Habit as Bad for Teeth as Meth Addiction, Study Claims"
from the quoted article and the original journal article the dental damage is caused by the acidity of the soda not the sweetener used - sugar or artificial!
Methamphetamine, crack cocaine and soda — sweetened or not — are all highly acidic and can cause similar dental problems, Bassiouny said in a study published recently in the journal General Dentistry.
so we have a misleading topic title based on a misleading web news item title and a whole thread full of unsupported and often dubious claims - all now indexed by Google thus further polluting search results for "diet soda"!Sugar-free soda is no better than regular soda when it comes to dental decay, Bassiouny added. "Both of them have the same drastic effect if they are consumed in the same frequency, the same amount and the same duration," he said.
isn't the Internet a great place to get your health information from when you don't consider the reliability and authority of the articles you read or quote from!
bkkguy
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Re: Diet soda
Is there ever going to be a post from you that isn't negative?bkkguy wrote:this is very misleading reporting
Re: Diet soda
until there are no longer posts that deserve a negative response I suppose I will just have to continue to bear the white man's burdenGaybutton wrote:Is there ever going to be a post from you that isn't negative?
bkkguy
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Re: Diet soda
There you have it, folks. Nothing about responding to a post that deserves a positive response. Nothing about initiating a topic about something positive. Just sheer negativity any time we hear from bkkguy. Ok, that's the word from our official resident noodge.bkkguy wrote:until there are no longer posts that deserve a negative response I suppose I will just have to continue to bear the white man's burden
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Re: Diet soda
I just took a look at the original articles, and I have to say bkkguy is right. Meaningless title "Diet soda" - Diet soda what? and a first comment that has nothing to do with the subject of the article, and further comments based on that (mine included, not reading the original article), and we are talking about a artificial sweeteners instead of tooth corrosion caused by acid.