Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Cola's Darkside: Pop Consumers At A Higher Risk Of Cancer

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Feb, 2015 02:04 PM
    People who consume one or more cans of cold drinks per day are exposing themselves to a potential carcinogen, warns a new study.
     
    The ingredient, 4-methylimidazole (4-MEI) - a possible human carcinogen - is formed during the manufacture of some kinds of caramel colour. Caramel colour is a common ingredient in colas and other dark soft drinks.
     
    "Soft drink consumers are being exposed to an avoidable and unnecessary cancer risk from an ingredient that is being added to these beverages simply for aesthetic purposes," said Keeve Nachman, senior author of the study.
     
    Building on an analysis of 4-MEI concentrations in 11 different soft drinks first published by Consumer Reports in 2014, researchers estimated exposure to 4-MEI from caramel-coloured soft drinks and modelled the potential cancer burden related to routine soft drink consumption levels in the United States.
     
    "This unnecessary exposure poses a threat to public health and raises questions about the continued use of caramel colouring in soda," Nachman of Johns Hopkins Center for a Liveable Future (CLF).
     
    Results indicated that levels of 4-MEI could vary substantially across samples, even for the same type of beverage.
     
    While there is currently no federal limit for 4-MEI in food or beverages, Consumer Reports petitioned the Food and Drug Administration last year to set limits for the potential carcinogen.
     
    "This new analysis underscores our belief that people consume significant amounts of soda that unnecessarily elevate their risk of cancer over the course of a lifetime," said Urvashi Rangan, executive director for Consumer Reports' Food Safety and Sustainability Center.
     
    The results were published online in the journal PLOS One.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week

    Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week
    TORONTO - Experimental Ebola vaccine that Canada has donated to the World Health Organization will be shipped to Geneva next week, the global health agency said Thursday.

    Canadian Ebola vaccine to be shipped to Geneva next week

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia
    Sleep problems like insomnia being reported among the elderly are more likely because of bad sleep quality and not their duration....

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture
    Men are the "weaker sex" in terms of death and disability caused by osteoporosis as their bone health is simply being ignored by the healthcare systems, shows a study....

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture

    Fried food before conceiving may cause gestational diabetes

    Fried food before conceiving may cause gestational diabetes
    Women who eat fried food regularly before conceiving are at increased risk of developing gestational diabetes during pregnancy, says a new study....

    Fried food before conceiving may cause gestational diabetes

    How binge drinking harms the liver

    How binge drinking harms the liver
    An Indian-origin researcher has identified epigenetic protein changes caused by binge drinking, a discovery that could lead to treatment for...

    How binge drinking harms the liver

    Skin exposure may trigger early peanut allergy in kids

    Skin exposure may trigger early peanut allergy in kids
    Many children become allergic to peanuts even before they eat them and skin exposure may contribute to the early sensitisation, says a study....

    Skin exposure may trigger early peanut allergy in kids