Sweetened Soda and Natural Juice Causes Long-Term Liver Damage

Daniel Birnbaum, invests in Seedo, Cannbit, was former CEO of SodastreamEating healthy, we already know is part of maintaining a green lifestyle.

If you haven’t by now stopped buying high in sugar colas, soft drinks and fruit juices, here is some news that might want you limiting your consumption, and drinking water instead:

A new study reveals that too much sweetened soda and fruit juice may cause long-term liver damage. Switching to water is the best preventive measure to contribute to long-term health.

It may be a good idea to replace the juice in your kid’s lunch box with a bottle of water. A health conscious physician has bad news for the beverage industry. According to Dr. Nimer Assy, people who drink more than one liter (about four cups) of sweetened beverages a day have a five times greater risk of developing fatty liver.

“In the long term, this contributes to more diabetes and heart disease,” warns the doctor from the Ziv Medical Center in Haifa, Israel.

While known culprits like sweetened carbonated soda are on the list of “no-nos,” natural and freshly squeezed fruit juices appear there, too. His findings are reported in the Journal of Hepatology, where Assy, a specialist in internal medicine, liver disease and liver transplantation and director of the Liver Unit at Ziv, warns that the beverages cited can cause long-term damage.

In his study, Assy followed 90 healthy patients with no perceived risk for fatty liver. He discovered that about 80 percent of the people in the study who were diagnosed with fatty liver drank more than half a liter (about two cups) of sweetened soft drinks (carbonated beverages and sweetened juices) every day, whereas only 17% of those in the control group had the condition.

Don’t squeeze, chew your fruit!

The ingredient in the sodas and juices that causes the damage is a fruit sugar called fructose, which is highly absorbable in the liver. It does not affect insulin production and goes straight to the liver where it is converted to fat. Fructose ups the chances that you will suffer from a fatty liver, which can lead to cirrhosis of the liver and liver cancer, Assy says.

The father of five, who lives in the Christian Arab village of Fassuta in the Galilee region of Israel, confesses that his own kids drink Coke. However, his advice to other parents is to limit their offsprings’ intake of soda or any sweetened beverage – natural or artificial – to not more than about one cup, juice box, or can, a day.

Red Bull and high energy drinks are a big problem in the Middle East, where kids drink cans of these high-fructose beverages instead of water.

To reap optimal benefits from fruit and avoid the liver damage possibility, Assy suggests eating the fruit whole. “The natural orange has fibers and prevents fructose from being absorbed [in the liver],” he explains. If that’s not possible, he recommends drinking fruit juice that has extra pulp in it.

Assy’s study was spurred by what he saw at his in-patient clinic. “We have noticed recently that there are many patients coming to the clinic with fatty infiltration of the liver,” he says. “Usually the risk factor is for people with obesity, diabetes and alcohol [abuse, but] we noticed some people without these pre-conditions could have fatty liver.”

Diet drinks are suspect as well

He started the study by asking his patients to take a questionnaire. As the group of 90 people (with a 50:50 ratio of women to men, ages 40 to 50) filled in the blanks, an explanation began to emerge. They were asked about their level of physical activity, caloric intake on a daily basis and the amount of soft drinks they consume.

“We found people who drink more than two cans of Coke a day have increased their chances for a fatty liver, and if left untreated their chances for heart disease and cirrhosis of the liver also increase,” Assy says.

When Assy refers to soft drinks, he’s including diet soft drinks in the mix. With inconclusive data on diet drinks, he believes that those containing artificial sweeteners may have a similar effect. While diet drinks do not contain fructose, they do have aspartame and caramel colorants: “Both these can increase insulin resistance and may induce fatty liver,” says the doctor.

Assy plans to conduct a more extensive study of the health effects of artificially sweetened drinks and he suspects that his findings may not be to the taste of the world’s beverage industry.

Karin Kloosterman
Karin Kloostermanhttp://www.greenprophet.com
Karin Kloosterman is an award-winning journalist, innovation strategist, and founder of Green Prophet, one of the Middle East’s pioneering sustainability platforms. She has ranked in the Top 10 of Verizon innovation competitions, participated in NASA-linked challenges, and spoken worldwide on climate, food security, and future resilience. With an IoT technology patent, features in Canada’s National Post, and leadership inside teams building next-generation agricultural and planetary systems — including Mars-farming concepts — Karin operates at the intersection of storytelling, science, and systems change. She doesn’t report on the future – she helps design it. Reach out directly to [email protected]
17 COMMENTS
  1. One thing is that often one of the most prevalent incentives for utilizing your cards is a cash-back or maybe rebate supply. Generally, you will get 1-5% back in various buying. Depending on the credit cards, you may get 1% back again on most purchases, and 5% in return on acquisitions made from convenience stores, filling stations, grocery stores as well as ‘member merchants’.

  2. Sydney, I have heard the same thing – there has been scientific research that has linked it to cancer (although most things are linked to cancer these days). I am skeptical that fruit juice can be said to be bad for you. A couple of glasses a day of nutritious, natural fluid cannot be bad for you.

Comments are closed.

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