A new study published today in Obesity, the journal
of The Obesity Society, confirms that drinking diet beverages can help people
lose weight.
"This study clearly demonstrates that diet
beverages can in fact help people lose weight, directly countering myths in
recent years that suggest the opposite effect -- weight gain," said James
O. Hill, Ph.D., executive director of the University of Colorado Anschutz
Health and Wellness Center and a co-author of the study. "In fact, those
who drank diet beverages lost more weight and reported feeling significantly
less hungry than those who drank water alone. This reinforces that if you're
trying to shed pounds, you can enjoy diet beverages."
The 12-week clinical study of 303 participants is
the first prospective, randomized clinical trial to directly compare the
effects of water and diet beverages on weight loss within a behavioral weight
loss program. Conducted simultaneously by researchers at the University of
Colorado Anschutz Center for Health and Wellness in Aurora and Temple University's
Center for Obesity Research and Education in Philadelphia, the study shows that
subjects who consumed diet beverages lost an average of 13 pounds -- 44 percent
more than the control group, which lost an average of 9 pounds. More than half
of the participants in the diet beverage group -- 64 percent -- lost at least
five percent of their body weight, compared with only 43 percent of the control
group. Losing just five percent of body weight has been shown to significantly
improve health, including lowering the risk of heart disease, high blood
pressure and type 2 diabetes. The study was supported by an unrestricted
educational grant from the American Beverage Association.
"There's so much misinformation about diet
beverages that isn't based on studies designed to test cause and effect,
especially on the Internet," said John C. Peters, co-author of the study
and the chief strategy officer of the CU Anschutz Health and Wellness Center.
"This research allows dieters to feel confident that low- and no-calorie
sweetened beverages can play an important and helpful role as part of an
effective and comprehensive weight loss strategy."
Study participants were randomly assigned to one of
two groups: those who were allowed to drink diet beverages, such as diet sodas,
teas and flavored waters, or those who were in a control group that drank water
only. With the exception of beverage options, both groups followed an identical
diet and exercise program for the duration of the study.
In addition to losing 44 percent more weight than
the control group, the diet beverage group also:
Reported feeling significantly less hungry;
Showed significantly greater improvements in serum
levels of total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) -- the so-called
"bad" cholesterol; and
Saw a significant reduction in serum triglycerides.
Both diet soda and water groups saw reductions in
waist circumference, and blood pressure.
This latest study adds to the body of research
demonstrating that diet beverages do not hinder, but in fact help, with weight
loss. In particular, two studies published in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition by researchers from the University of North Carolina in 2012 and 2013
randomly assigned non-dieting participants to drink either water or diet
beverages. While both groups cut their food intake significantly, after six
months the diet beverage group had a greater likelihood of reaching a meaningful
(5 percent) amount of weight loss compared to the control group. The diet
beverage group also experienced a greater reduction in dessert consumption than
the water group. Overall, the findings suggest that diet beverages do not fuel
a preference for sweet foods and drinks.
Additional research published in 2009 on weight loss
maintenance, drawn from the National Weight Control Registry, found that
successful weight loss maintainers drank three times more diet beverages than
those who had never lost weight.
The study was supported by the American Beverage
Association (ABA), a trade association in Washington, DC.It was peer-reviewed
and posted on www.clinicaltrials.gov. Neither ABA, nor any of its members, was
involved in any part of the study, its analysis or the writing of this paper.
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