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Thread: Diet Coke Causes Kidney Problems

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    Default Diet Coke Causes Kidney Problems

    I found this article on diet coke linked to kidney problems...

    Diet soda may help keep your calories in check, but drinking two or more diet sodas a day may double your risk of declining kidney function, a new study shows.

    Women who drank two or more diet sodas a day had a 30% drop in a measure of kidney function during the lengthy study follow-up, according to research presented Saturday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Nephrology in San Diego.

    "Thirty percent is considered significant,'' says researcher Julie Lin, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and a staff physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. That's especially true, she says, because most study participants had well-preserved kidney function at the start of the study.

    Diet Soda and Kidneys: Study Details

    The researchers evaluated 3,256 women already participating in the Nurses' Health Study who had submitted dietary information, including their intake of sugary beverages -- sugar-sweetened drinks, sugar-sweetened soda, and artificially sweetened soda. Sugar-sweetened drinks included soda, fruit juices, punch, and iced tea.

    Information was also available on measures of kidney function. Their median age was 67.

    Lin's team looked at the cumulative average beverage intake, derived from food questionnaires completed in 1984, 1986, and 1990. The women replied whether they drank the beverages less than once a month, one to four times a month, two to six times weekly, once daily but less than twice, or twice a day or more often.

    Diet Soda and Kidneys: Study Results

    When the researchers compared kidney function of the women in 1989 and 2000, they found that 11.4% or 372 women had a kidney function decline of 30% or more. When they looked at the diet information, they found that the 30% decline in kidney function was associated with drinking two or more artificially sweetened sodas a day. This was true even after taking into account factors such as age, high blood pressure, diabetes, and physical activity.

    Put another way: the women who drank two or more diet sodas a day had a decline in their glomerular filtration rate, a measure of kidney function, of 3 milliliters per minute per year. ''With natural aging, kidney function declines about 1 mL per minute per year after age 40," Lin says. No link was found with the other beverages. And less than two sodas a day didn't seem to hurt. "We didn't see any association up to two artificially sweetened beverages a day," Lin says.

    ''A serving was reported as either a glass, a can, or a bottle of a beverage," Lin tells WebMD. ''It was not more specific than that."

    ''The mechanisms aren't clear," Lin says of the association she found. In another study she presented at the meeting, she found higher salt intake is also associated with faster kidney function decline.

    All of the participants were women, so Lin can't say for sure that the association holds for men, although she says there is ''no biological reason to think it wouldn't."

    About 20 million Americans have some evidence of chronic kidney disease, according to the society. Kidney disease diagnoses have doubled each of the last two decades.

    Diet Soda and Kidney Function: Industry Input

    Asked to review the study findings, Maureen Storey, senior vice president of science policy for the American Beverage Association, says in a prepared statement: "It's important to remember that this is an abstract presented at an annual meeting." She notes that the research needs further scrutiny by researchers.

    She acknowledges that kidney disease is serious but that diabetes and high blood pressure account for the majority of kidney disease cases, ''not consumption of diet soda."

    Diet Soda and Kidney Function: Dietitian's View

    In reviewing the study, Connie Diekman, RD, director of university nutritionfor Washington University, St. Louis, wonders if the link might have come about because of long-term consumption, as many of the participants were older adults.

    The link found, she says, "calls for more studies where actual intake can be assessed, rather than taking the information from food frequency questionnaires, which could be subject to mistakes."

    Diet drinks, she says, are ''generally low in important health-promoting nutrients, so keeping them as a small part of your eating plan would be a smart step."

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    • seizures and convulsions
    • dizziness
    • tremors
    • migraines and severe headaches (Trigger or Cause From Chronic Intake)
    • memory loss (common toxicity effects)
    • slurring of speech
    • confusion
    • numbness or tingling of extremities
    • chronic fatigue
    • depression
    • insomnia
    • irritability
    • panic attacks (common aspartame toxicity reaction)
    • marked personality changes
    • phobias
    • rapid heart beat, tachycardia (another frequent reaction)
    • asthma
    • chest pains
    • hypertension (high blood pressure)
    • nausea or vomitting
    • diarrhea
    • abdominal pain
    • swallowing pain
    • itching
    • hives / urticaria
    • other allergic reactions
    • blood sugar control problems (e.g., hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia)
    • menstrual cramps and other menstraul problems or changes
    • impotency and sexual problems
    • food cravings
    • weight gain
    • hair loss / baldness or thinning of hair
    • burning urination & other urination problems
    • excessive thirst or excessive hunger
    • bloating, edema (fluid retention)
    • infection susceptibility
    • joint pain
    • brain cancer (Pre-approval studies in animals)
    • death


    Aspartame Disease Mimmicks Symptoms or Worsens the Following Diseases

    • fibromyalgia
    • arthritis
    • multiple sclerosis (MS)
    • parkinson's disease
    • lupus
    • multiple chemical sensitivities (MCS)
    • diabetes and diabetic Complications
    • epilepsy
    • alzheimer's disease
    • birth defects
    • chronic fatigue syndrome
    • lymphoma
    • lyme disease
    • attention deficit disorder (ADD and ADHD)
    • panic disorder
    • depression and other psychological disorders

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    Ralph G. Walton, a psychologist at Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, stated in a self-published 1996 analysis of aspartame research that industry-funded studies found no safety concerns while 84 of 92 independent studies did identify safety concerns.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspartame_controversy

    Intake

    The acceptable daily intake (ADI) value for aspartame, as well as other food additives studied, is defined as the "amount of a food additive, expressed on a body weight basis, that can be ingested daily over a lifetime without appreciable health risk."

    The Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) and the European Commission's Scientific Committee on Food has determined this value is 40 mg/kg of body weight for aspartame, while FDA has set its ADI for aspartame at 50 mg/kg.

    The primary source for exposure to aspartame in the United States is diet soft drinks, though it can be consumed in other products, such as pharmaceutical preparations, fruit drinks, and chewing gum among others in smaller quantities. A 12 US fluid ounce (355 ml) can of diet soda contains 180 milligrams (0.0063 oz) of aspartame, and for a 75 kg (165 lb) adult, it takes approximately 21 cans of diet soda daily to consume the 3,750 milligrams (0.132 oz) of aspartame that would surpass the FDA's 50 milligrams per kilogram of body weight ADI of aspartame from diet soda alone.

    The question is do you believe this?

  5. #5

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    No. I know many people who have difficulty with aspartame, especially in diet sodas and things like meal replacement shakes. They will usually see the onset of symptoms before the beverage is even finished.

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