The Witness

Drinking apple cider vinegar may help with weight loss but its health benefits are overstated

- STEPHEN HUGHES • Stephen Hughes is a senior lecturer in Medicine at Anglia Ruskin University.

Apple cider vinegar has been hailed as the latest immune boosting wonder supplement, but these claims should be taken with a pinch of salt. However, there is evidence that it could help with weight loss.

Each morning at breakfast, my partner gives me orange juice that tastes more sour than expected. One day, she said that she adds apple cider vinegar to improve my health.

As a former primary schoolteac­her she swears by the stuff. She tells me she kept apple cider vinegar in the staffroom so that when children became ill with diarrhoea and vomiting, she could take it immediatel­y to protect her from the illness.

I was sceptical about yet another immune-boosting miracle ingredient. Apple cider vinegar is a natural product made of fermented apple juice that has gone sour.

Apparently, the best stuff is cloudy and has sediment, known as the “mother”, because it is relatively unfiltered, this is where the good bacteria lives. Without the mother, there’s unlikely to be much benefit to taking apple cider vinegar.

I decided to turn medical sleuth and investigat­e whether apple cider vinegar is as good for health as it sounds. There isn’t as much scientific evidence to support its popularity as a health tonic as some influencer­s might like to think.

CLAIM: DISINFECTA­NT PROPERTIES

Vinegar has a long history as a surface decontamin­ant and perhaps this is why salad dressings contain vinegar, as well as adding flavour, it may kill micro-organisms on raw vegetables.

But does apple cider vinegar’s decontamin­ant qualities translate to the human gut? Our stomachs produce acid, which acts as a natural barrier to infection, so how can adding more acid help?

Research suggests that apple cider vinegar delays stomach emptying so perhaps increased time in contact with stomach acid might account for the claimed protective effect against enteric infections.

CLAIM: WEIGHT LOSS AND MANAGEMENT OF TYPE 2 DIABETES

There are plenty of anecdotal claims that apple cider vinegar can aid weight loss, supported by limited evidence from several small studies.

A randomised controlled trial published in early 2024 showed significan­t reductions in weight and waist size of 120 overweight and obese young people. There were also reductions in serum triglyceri­des — blood fats that can raise the risk of heart disease if levels are too high – and cholestero­l over the three-month follow-up period.

Asystemati­c review from 2020, however, found evidence of only marginal benefits citing “insufficie­nt evidence”. Another subsequent systematic review from 2021 — looking at dietary supplement­ation with acetic acid from all vinegar types — found evidence of significan­t reductions in fasting blood glucose, particular­ly in individual­s with type 2 diabetes.

The study also showed benefits in reducing serum triglyceri­des and cholestero­l.

Apple cider vinegar is thought to cause weight loss through its effect on delay of gastric emptying. This increases a sense of fullness and reduces appetite. Reduced calorific intake will lead to weight loss, but how are the metabolic effects on blood glucose and lipids mediated?

Blood glucose levels are controlled by the pancreatic hormone insulin. In type 2 diabetes there is a reduction in sensitivit­y to insulin which in turn leads to a reduced uptake of glucose by cells.

There is some evidence that apple cider vinegar, and other sources of acetic acid, improves insulin sensitivit­y so it’s possible that there are some benefits for those with this condition.

Since high blood glucose levels are associated with high serum lipid levels, the associated reduction in blood glucose levels caused by improved insulin sensitivit­y should improve in blood lipid profiles as demonstrat­ed in literature reviews.

CLAIM: REDUCES RISK OF HEART DISEASE

Raised blood lipids are a risk factor for cardiovasc­ular diseases such as myocardial infarction and stroke. Can apple cider vinegar consumptio­n reduce their incidence?

Well, I’m afraid there’s no scientific evidence that vinegar consumptio­n of any kind reduces cardiovasc­ular morbidity and mortality in those with or without diabetes.

For those without diabetes, the benefits of vinegar consumptio­n on blood lipid levels are less clear, as suggested in this study from 2013.

CLAIM: CANCER TREATMENT AND PREVENTION

One of the more outrageous claims of the benefits of daily apple cider vinegar consumptio­n is that it may prevent or treat cancer.

A frequently quoted case-control study from China found that an increased consumptio­n of vinegar was associated with a reduced incidence of oesophagea­l cancer. What some popular internet sources who cite this study don’t say is that eating beans and vegetables was also found to be protective, as well as was eating a diet with a normal salt intake and drinking water from a tap.

There are always multiple confoundin­g factors when claims are made concerning cancer and we must always be on our critical guard.

Should I continue to take my apple cider vinegar? The evidence suggests that it will help with my waistline and my weight so I’ll put up with the sour taste for a while longer.

 ?? PHOTO: UNSPLASH ??
PHOTO: UNSPLASH

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