Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Sugary Drinks Hamper Body's Normal Stress Response

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Apr, 2015 12:26 PM
    Do you always pick up a soda can from the refrigerator every time you feel a little stressed? This could be because sugary drinks may relieve stress in humans by disrupting the body's normal response to stressful situations.
     
    "Although it may be tempting to suppress feelings of stress, a normal reaction to stress is important to good health," explained one of the study's authors Kevin Laugero from the University of California, Davis.
     
    Drinking sugar-sweetened beverages can suppress the hormone cortisol and stress responses in the brain, but diet beverages sweetened with the artificial sweetner aspartame do not have the same effect, the findings showed.
     
    "This is the first evidence that high sugar - but not aspartame - consumption may relieve stress in humans," Laugero noted.
     
    "The concern is psychological or emotional stress could trigger the habitual overconsumption of sugar and amplify sugar's detrimental health effects, including obesity," Laugero said.
     
    Overconsumption of sugary drinks such as soda and juice have been linked to the obesity epidemic and several other health risks.
     
    The study examined the effects of consuming sugar and aspartame-sweetened beverages on a group of 19 women between the ages of 18 and 40.
     
    The researchers assigned eight women to consume aspartame-sweetened beverages, and 11 to drink sugar-sweetened beverages for a 12-day period and assessed their performance in a maths test.
     
    Women who drank sugar-sweetened beverages during the study had a diminished cortisol response to the math test, compared to women who were assigned to consume aspartame-sweetened beverages.
     
    In addition, the women who consumed sugar-sweetened beverages exhibited more activity in the hippocampus - a part of the brain that is involved in memory and is sensitive to stress - than the women who drank aspartame-sweetened beverages.
     
    The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Ebola: When It's Contagious, How It Spreads And Other Things You Need To Know To Stay Safe

    Ebola: When It's Contagious, How It Spreads And Other Things You Need To Know To Stay Safe
    Only when someone is showing symptoms, which can start with vague symptoms including a fever, flu-like body aches and abdominal pain, and then vomiting and diarrhea.

    Ebola: When It's Contagious, How It Spreads And Other Things You Need To Know To Stay Safe

    Brain may produce nerve cells even after stroke

    Brain may produce nerve cells even after stroke
    Scientists have discovered a previously unknown mechanism through which the brain produces new nerve cells even after a stroke....

    Brain may produce nerve cells even after stroke

    How the Ebola virus got its name

    How the Ebola virus got its name
    The deadly Ebola virus that has killed over 3,300 people in West Africa since its current outbreak was confirmed in March, was christened in 1976 after a river....

    How the Ebola virus got its name

    Faecal capsules may treat gut infection

    Faecal capsules may treat gut infection
    C. difficile bacteria live harmlessly in many people's guts alongside hundreds of other species - all competing for space and food. But some antibiotics can kill C...

    Faecal capsules may treat gut infection

    High cholesterol ups risk of prostate cancer recurrence

    High cholesterol ups risk of prostate cancer recurrence
    Higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides, two types of fat, in the blood of men who underwent surgery for prostate cancer, may increase risk of disease recurrence, says a study....

    High cholesterol ups risk of prostate cancer recurrence

    Healthy lifestyles reduces bowel cancer risk in men

    Healthy lifestyles reduces bowel cancer risk in men
    Men who opt for multiple healthy lifestyle behaviours are at less risk of developing bowel cancer than women, a significant study shows....

    Healthy lifestyles reduces bowel cancer risk in men