| 16 Mars 2015
In an effort to combat obesity, many adults try to reduce sugar intake  by turning to nonnutritive or artificial sweeteners, such as aspartame,  saccharin, or sucralose.  Previous research shows that in the past 30  years, artificial sweeteners and diet soda intake have increased, yet  the prevalence of obesity has also seen a dramatic increase in the same  time period.  Many of the studies exploring diet soda consumption and  cardiometabolic diseases have focused on middle-aged and younger adults. “Our study seeks to fill the age gap by exploring the adverse health  effects of diet soda intake in individuals 65 years of age and older,”  explains lead author Sharon Fowler, MPH, from the University of Texas  Health Science Center at San Antonio.  “The burden of metabolic syndrome  and cardiovascular disease, along with healthcare costs, is great in  the ever-increasing senior population.” The San Antonio Longitudinal Study of Aging (SALSA) enrolled 749  Mexican- and European-Americans who were aged 65 and older at the start  of the study (1992-96).  Diet soda intake, waist circumference, height,  and weight were measured at study onset, and at three follow-ups in  2000-01, 2001-03, and 2003-04, for a total of 9.4 follow-up years. At  the first follow-up there were 474 (79.1%) surviving participants; there  were 413 (73.4%) at the second follow-up and 375 (71.0%) at the third  follow-up. Findings indicate that the increase in waist circumference among diet  soda drinkers, per follow-up interval, was almost triple that among  non-users: 2.11 cm versus 0.77 cm, respectively.  After adjustment for  multiple potential confounders, interval waist circumference increases  were 0.77 cm for non-users, 1.76 cm for occasional users, and 3.04 cm  for daily users.  This translates to waist circumference increases of  0.80 inches for non-users, 1.83 inches for occasional users, and 3.16  inches for daily users over the total 9.4-year SALSA follow-up period. “The SALSA study shows that increasing diet soda intake was associated  with escalating abdominal obesity, which may increase cardiometabolic  risk in older adults,” Fowler concludes.  The authors recommend that  older individuals who drink diet soda daily, particularly those at high  cardiometabolic risk, should try to curb their consumption of  artificially sweetened drinks.
A new study published in the   Journal of the American Geriatrics Society shows that increasing diet soda intake is directly linked to greater  abdominal obesity in adults 65 years of age and older.  Findings raise  concerns about the safety of chronic diet soda consumption, which may  increase belly fat and contribute to greater risk of metabolic syndrome  and cardiovascular diseases. 
Metabolic syndrome—a combination of risk factors that may lead to high  blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease, and stroke—is one of the  results of the obesity epidemic.  In fact, the World Health Organization  (WHO) estimates that 1.9 billion adults were overweight (body mass  index [BMI] of 25 or more) in 2014. Of this group, 600 million people  fell into the obese range (BMI of 30 or more)—a figure that has more  than doubled since 1980.