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Original title: Regularly drinking sugar-free drinks Menomanic women have more strokes
A study by the Einstein College of Medicine at the University of Yeshiva in the United States shows that menoanth women who regularly drink sugar-free beverages have a higher risk of stroke.
-free beverage is an artificial sweetener instead of sucrose drink. The researchers assessed 817,000 middle-aged and older women over a three-year period and asked them to report the amount of sugar-free drinks they had consumed in the previous three months. Including stroke risk factors such as age, high blood pressure and smoking, the researchers found that women who drank two or three sugar-free drinks a day had a 23 percent higher risk of stroke, a 31 percent higher risk of ishemia stroke from cerebral thrombosis, a 29 percent higher risk of heart disease, and a 16 percent higher risk of death than women who drank less than one or none of the sugar-free drinks a week.
findings are published in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Heart Association, Stroke.
The Eureka Alert, a news site sponsored by the American Association for the Promotion of Science, quoted researchers at Einstein College of Medicine as saying on February 14th that many people, especially some overweight or obese people, believe that drinking sugar-free drinks can reduce dietary calories. However, "our study and other observational studies have shown that artificial sweetener beverages are not harmless and that drinking more is associated with an increased risk of stroke and heart disease." Since the study is limited to menoanthing women, the results may not be extended to young women or men. (According to Xinhua News Agency, Huang Min)