The New Zealand Herald

Scientist mum runs ruler over diet fizz

- Jamie Morton

While expecting her first child, Dr Clare Reynolds switched from normal fizzy drinks to diet.

It was a rational move — the lesser of two evils, she figured — yet when she checked what research had been done, she found surprising­ly little.

That prompted Reynolds, a researcher at the University of Auckland-based Liggins Institute, to explore what effect — and harm — artificial sweeteners could be having on pregnancy.

“There’s been a lot of media attention around sugary drinks of late, and that’s been spurring on research,” Reynolds said.

“But the problem with artificial sweeteners, specifical­ly, is there’s very little evidence about.”

Some of Reynold’s group’s preliminar­y results have indicated artificial sweeteners could be just as bad as regular sugary drinks.

Current internatio­nal evidence from animal models suggests sugarsweet­ened soft drinks, especially those high in fructose, may lead to metabolic dysfunctio­n in the mother and the offspring when ingested during pregnancy and lactation.

But diet beverages, which are high in artificial sweeteners such as acelsulfam­e-K and aspartame, have also been linked to obesity and metabolic dysfunctio­n, among other adverse health effects.

Specific issues included a higher risk of heart disease and chronic kidney disease in women who drank two or more artificial sweetened diet soft drinks when compared to those who consumed less than one — and a higher risk of pre-term delivery in pregnant women.

The broader health impacts of artificial sweeteners are still being confirmed.

Reynolds is now supervisin­g a new PhD project by Liggins researcher Pania Bridge-Comer, which focuses on what effect artificial sweeteners, specifical­ly acesulfame-K, during pregnancy have on a child’s metabolic and reproducti­ve health later.

It was already known that a diet supplement­ed with artificial sweeteners led to higher obesity in offspring, putting children at increased risk of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart disease.

Often, metabolic issues could also worsen reproducti­ve dysfunctio­n. A higher incidence of obesity possibly reduces fertility.

Her study, supported by a threeyear grant from the Health Research Council, will delve deeper by using a mouse model to pinpoint any effects before, during and after pregnancy.

Offspring of the mice will be analysed for various hormone levels, specific genes linked to reproducti­ve function, the number of follicles in the ovaries, and tests to determine timing of the estrus cycle.

“These methods will all allow an idea of how the reproducti­ve function is influenced in the offspring,” Bridge-Comer said.

The study also stood to add much to the Developmen­tal Origins of Health and Disease model, which linked the maternal environmen­t and that of the developing fetus and was used in labs around the world.

“Rates of obesity and obesityrel­ated morbiditie­s are rising in New Zealand and globally, so understand­ing the underlying mechanisms in generation­al cycles of obesity may prove a useful method in helping to mitigate these increasing rates,” Bridge-Comer said.

Reynolds believed the consumptio­n of artificial sweeteners by fathers also warranted investigat­ion in the future.

“I think it would be really interestin­g to see if they can affect male fertility, and whether that has any knock-on effect on the next generation that might be born.”

Doubters try to bury sugary-drink tax A18

There’s been a lot of media attention around sugary drinks of late, and that’s been spurring on research. But the problem with artificial sweeteners, specifical­ly, is there’s very little evidence about. Clare Reynolds

 ??  ?? Dr Clare Reynolds’ pregnancy led her to question the effects of artificial sweeteners.
Dr Clare Reynolds’ pregnancy led her to question the effects of artificial sweeteners.

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