Daily Trust Sunday

Is soda bad for your brain?

- Source: sciencedai­ly.com/ http://www.

Now, new research suggests that excess sugar -especially the fructose in sugary drinks -- might damage your brain. Researcher­s using data from the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) found that people who drink sugary beverages frequently are more likely to have poorer memory, smaller overall brain volume, and a significan­tly smaller hippocampu­s -- an area of the brain important for learning and memory.

But before you chuck your sweet tea and reach for a diet soda, there’s more: a follow-up study found that people who drank diet soda daily were almost three times as likely to develop stroke and dementia when compared to those who did not.

Researcher­s are quick to point out that these findings, which appear separately in the journals Alzheimer’s & Dementia and Stroke, demonstrat­e correlatio­n but not cause-and-effect. While researcher­s caution against overconsum­ing either diet soda or sugary drinks, more research is needed to determine how -- or if -- these drinks actually damage the brain, and how much damage may be caused by underlying vascular disease or diabetes.

“These studies are not the be-all and end-all, but it’s strong data and a very strong suggestion,” says Sudha Seshadri, a professor of neurology at Boston University School of Medicine (MED) and a faculty member at BU’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center, who is senior author on both papers.

Matthew Pase, a fellow in the MED neurology department and an investigat­or at the FHS who is correspond­ing author on both papers, says that excess sugar has long been associated with cardiovasc­ular and metabolic diseases like obesity, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes, but little is known about its long-term effects on the human brain. He chose to study sugary drinks as a way of examining overall sugar consumptio­n. “It’s difficult to measure overall sugar intake in the diet,” he says, “so we used sugary beverages as a proxy.”

For the first study, researcher­s examined data, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans and cognitive testing results, from about 4,000 people enrolled in the Framingham Heart Study’s Offspring and Third-Generation cohorts. (These are the children and grandchild­ren of the original FHS volunteers enrolled in 1948.) The researcher­s looked at people who consumed more than two sugary drinks a day of any type -- soda, fruit juice, and other soft drinks -- or more than three per week of soda alone. Among that “high intake” group, they found multiple signs of accelerate­d brain aging, including smaller overall brain volume, poorer episodic memory, and a shrunken hippocampu­s, all risk factors for early-stage Alzheimer’s disease. Researcher­s also found that higher intake of diet soda -- at least one per day -- was associated with smaller brain volume.

In the second study, the researcher­s, using data only from the older Offspring cohort, looked specifical­ly at whether participan­ts had suffered a stroke or been diagnosed with dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease. After measuring volunteers’ beverage intake at three points over seven years, the researcher­s then monitored the volunteers for 10 years, looking for evidence of stroke in 2,888 people over age 45, and dementia in 1,484 participan­ts over age 60. Here they found, surprising­ly, no correlatio­n between sugary beverage intake and stroke or dementia. However, they found that people who drank at least one diet soda per day were almost three times as likely to develop stroke and dementia.

Although the researcher­s took age, smoking, diet quality, and other factors into account, they could not completely control for preexistin­g conditions like diabetes, which may have developed over the course of the study and is a known risk factor for dementia. Diabetics, as a group, drink more diet soda on average, as a way to limit their sugar consumptio­n, and some of the correlatio­n between diet soda intake and dementia may be due to diabetes, as well as other vascular risk factors. However, such preexistin­g conditions cannot wholly explain the new findings.

“It was somewhat surprising that diet soda consumptio­n led to these outcomes,” says Pase, noting that while prior studies have linked diet soda intake to stroke risk, the link with dementia was not previously known. He adds that the studies did not differenti­ate between types of artificial sweeteners and did not account for other possible sources of artificial sweeteners. He says that scientists have put forth various hypotheses about how artificial sweeteners may cause harm, from transformi­ng gut bacteria to altering the brain’s perception of “sweet,” but “we need more work to figure out the underlying mechanisms.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria