New research found that less than one can of soda a day can raise your risk of developing a fatty liver by up to 60% Cara Lynn Shultz is a writer-reporter at PEOPLE. Her work has previously appeared ...
Drinking as little as one can of diet soda a day may increase the risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease by 60%, while drinking a sugary beverage could raise the risk by 50%, a new unpublished ...
Diet versions of beverages are often hailed as healthier than the sugar-sweetened original versions. Research is ongoing regarding the potential dangers of sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened ...
Maybe sugar substitutes aren’t such a Splenda-did idea. An eye-opening new study links artificially sweetened beverages to an increased risk of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease ...
(CNN) — Drinking as little as one can of diet soda a day may increase the risk of nonalcohol fatty liver disease by 60%, while drinking a sugary beverage could raise the risk by 50%, a new unpublished ...