Even after accounting for factors like body mass index, overall calorie intake, and several other lifestyle risk factors, the differences were striking:
With each additional 12-oz serving of sugar-sweetened beverages (i.e., soft drinks, energy drinks, and sports drinks) per day, the risk for developing T2D increased by 25%. This strong relationship showed that the increased risk began from the very first daily serving with no minimum threshold below which intake appeared to be safe.
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Where Our Sugar Comes From Matters Just As Much As How Much We Consume
scitechdaily.com
8 ideas
·1.75K reads
IDEAS CURATED BY
A massive new study reveals that the source of sugar makes all the difference. While sugary drinks like soda and even fruit juice sharply increase the risk of type 2 diabetes, sugars in solid foods—especially nutrient-rich ones—may actually be less harmful or even protective.
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