The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Sweeteners may increase the risk of cardiovascular disease

2022-09-07T23:24:24.541Z


According to a study, people who consume the most sweeteners, especially aspartame and acesulfame-K, have a higher risk of cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and coronary heart disease.


Used to replace sugar in many drinks but also in food, sweeteners could be associated with increased risks of cardiovascular disease, according to a French study published Thursday, September 8 in the

British Medical Journal

.

Given the harmfulness of added sugars, artificial sweeteners are used as alternatives in thousands of foods and beverages to reduce the amount of sugar and associated calories while maintaining a sweet taste.

But the safety of these food additives is debated.

People who consume the most sweeteners, in particular aspartame and acesulfame-K, have a higher risk of cancer, concluded a French observational study, published in March by researchers from Inserm, INRAE, from Sorbonne Paris Nord University and Cnam.

To explore this time the associated cardiovascular risks, these members of the nutritional epidemiology research team (EREN) used the same methodology on the health and sweetener consumption data of 103,388 French men and women adults participating in the study. of the NutriNet-Santé cohort.

Among other information, the volunteers detailed their food consumption.

37% of participants consumed sweeteners, on average 42.46 mg/day, equivalent to an individual sachet of table-top sweetener or 100 ml of diet soda.

Limits of the study

After collecting information on the diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases over the follow-up (2009-2021), statistical analyzes investigated the associations between consumption of sweeteners and the risk of such diseases.

According to the study, artificial sweeteners, including aspartame, acesulfame-K and sucralose, are associated with increased risks of cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and coronary heart disease.

Over nine years of follow-up, 1,502 cardiovascular events occurred (heart attacks, angina pectoris, angioplasties, strokes, etc.).

Until then, studies had suggested an increased risk of cardiovascular disease associated with the consumption of sweetened beverages.

None looked at exposure to sweeteners as a whole, according to the authors.

“These results, in agreement with the latest WHO report published this year, do not support the use of sweeteners as safe alternatives to sugar

,” concludes Dr. Mathilde Touvier, research director at Inserm. and study coordinator.

However, this has limits.

This

“observational study cannot answer the question posed”

because of

“major differences in many characteristics of people who consume artificial sweeteners compared to those who do not”

, judged in particular with the Science Media Center Naveed Sattar , professor of metabolic disease medicine at the University of Glasgow.

In his eyes, it

“suggests far too strongly a causal link between sweeteners and cardiovascular disease”

with a methodology that is not strong enough, and that

“longer-term and larger randomized trials” are needed.

.

Further research will be needed to replicate and possibly confirm these results.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2022-09-07

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.