Adults who drink at least one sugar-sweetened drink a day are slightly more likely to develop kidney stones than people who rarely imbibe them, according to a new study.
While the recommendation for kidney stone prevention has been to drink a lot of fluids, the study suggests that it's not just the amount of fluid but the type of drink that also matters.
Dr. Gary Curhan, the senior author of the study, said patients often ask for dietary advice to help prevent kidney stones.
While the recommendation has been to drink plenty of fluids, Curhan said, patients often ask, "what should I drink? There's a lot of lore out there."
Frequent punch drinkers also had an 18 percent higher chance of developing kidney stones.
For every 100,000 people who drank punch at least every day, 226 developed kidney stones, compared to 158 out of every 100,000 participants who had punch less than once a week.
"Sodas are so commonly used that even though the absolute rate doesn't look that different, if there's a huge number of people consuming it, then the magnitude on the public health can be quite substantial," Curhan told Reuters Health.
Other drinks, such as coffee, tea, wine, beer and orange juice were tied to a lower risk of developing kidney stones.
For instance, 205 out of every 100,000 people who rarely drank coffee developed kidney stones, compared to 137 out of every 100,000 people who drank it daily.
Just 96 out of every 100,000 people who drank red wine daily developed kidney stones, while 174 out of every 100,000 people who drank red wine less than once a week developed kidney stones.
Curhan's study, published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, follows others showing a link between stones and fructose, non-dairy calcium, vitamin C supplements and other factors.
The new study doesn't prove cause-and-effect between certain drinks and kidney stones, but it's possible that sugar could be involved, Curhan said, because it might play a role in how the body handles calcium.
Another possibility is that sugary drinks might be contributing to obesity, and obesity is also tied to a higher kidney stone risk, said Dr. Elaine Worcester, a professor at the University of Chicago, who was not part of the study.
Despite the lack of proof of a cause-effect relationship, Worcester said "these kinds of studies are the best we have to give advice to our patients."
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Call for ban on AI apps creating naked images of children
8 minutes -
Bawumia is not shifting blame – Nana B
9 minutes -
Namibian minister sacked after being accused of rape
13 minutes -
‘I am satisfied with the three points against Young Apostles’ – Ibrahim Tanko
13 minutes -
Kumasi’s young entrepreneurs optimistic about Mahama’s Adwumawura Initiative
18 minutes -
‘I was impressed with my team’ – Nana Agyemang on win over GoldStars
31 minutes -
Francis-Xavier Sosu honours NDC branch executives, launches GHC1m Welfare Fund
32 minutes -
Hindsight: Zito returns to Kotoko with an opportunity to enhance his legacy
35 minutes -
AI for Faulty Transformers: AI4SD project targets Ghana’s power reliability issues
36 minutes -
Fight against illicit financial flows must start with media commitment – GII
39 minutes -
Ghana U-15 Girls: Five youngsters to watch after African Schools Football Championship success
41 minutes -
Putin announces three-day Russian ceasefire in Ukraine from 8 May
42 minutes -
Vice Chancellors Ghana demands review of retirement age for university lecturers from 60 to 70-yrs
46 minutes -
Otumfuo Osei Tutu II Foundation marks 25 years of transforming lives in deprived communities
51 minutes -
Ghana’s horticultural sector: A blooming force for inclusive growth and a 24-Hour Economy
54 minutes