(CNN) — Drinking as little as one can of diet soda a day may increase the risk of nonalcohol fatty liver disease by 60%, while drinking a sugary beverage could raise the risk by 50%, a new unpublished ...
Recent studies point to a clear pattern: Sugary drinks carry greater long-term health risks than the occasional sweet treat. A 2025 Brigham Young University meta-analysis of more than 500,000 people ...
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Sugary drinks increase risk of heart disease in children — expertA Gombe-based cardiologist, Dr Abubakar Sani, says excessive consumption of sugary drinks increases risk of cardiovascular diseases in children.He said excessive consumption of Sugar-Sweetened ...
Sugar and sweeteners have both found themselves in the spotlight in recent years, and not for the right reasons. In different ways, both have been linked to negative health outcomes. Now, a new study ...
Diet soda may not be a safe alternative to sugar-sweetened drinks when it comes to liver health, a new study finds. A recent study linked both sugary and artificially sweetened drinks to a higher risk ...
People could be at higher risk of fatty liver disease from both sugary sodas and diet drinks, a new study says. In fact, artificially sweetened drinks might pose a greater threat to liver health than ...
Sugary and artificially sweetened drinks both increase the risk of liver disease, suggests a new study. Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and low- or non-sugar-sweetened beverages (LNSSBs) are ...
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