What Happens to Your Body After You Drink a Soda Every Day, For a Long Time
Sugar-rushes and caffeine-highs followed by a depressing
energy crash are What happens to your body if you drink a Coke right now, but
plenty of Blisstree readers actually seem to be okay with that. Some of you
think it’s alarmist to compare a caffeine and sugar rush to doing drugs, and
some just don’t really care about the slump they’ll find themselves in after
drinking 39 grams of sugar, but what makes us really worried about a
soda-slurping habit is what happens over the long term.
Here’s a quick snapshot of you, in a few years, after
drinking Coke on a regular basis:
You’ll Be Fatter: According to research in the Nurse’s
Health Study, which monitored the health of 90,000 women for eight years,
drinking a single soda every day of the week added 10 pounds over a four-year
period.
You’ll Probably Have Diabetes: In the Nurses’ Health Study,
women who said they drank one or more servings a day of a sugar-sweetened soft
drink or fruit punch were twice as likely to have developed type 2 diabetes
during the study than those who rarely consumed these beverages.
You’re Much More Likely to Develop Heart Disease: According
to a study published in 2007 in Circulation, the journal of the American Heart
Association, subjects who drank a soda every day over a four-year period had a
25% chance of developing high blood sugar levels and a 32% greater chance of
developing lower “good” cholesterol levels. The Nurses’ Health Study found that
women who drank more than two sugary beverages per day had a 40% higher risk of
heart attacks or death from heart disease than women who rarely drank sugary
beverages.
You’re Probably Also Less Healthy In Other Ways: Several
studies, including the 2007 study published in Circulation, suggest that diet
sodas have some of the same effects on health as regular sodas, despite having
none or very little of the sugar. Why? Drinking soda is typically part of an
overall lifestyle that’s not very healthy: We know you don’t like us to compare
drinking caffeine and sugar to substance abuse, but when it comes to your
lifestyle, some think that soda is just like a gateway drug.
No comments:
Post a Comment