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Senior Citizen Health & Medicine
Osteoporosis Risk Increases for Older Women Drinking
Cola
All the facts aren't in, say experts, but women may
want to hold off on cola
October 6, 2006 – They are not sure why, but a
study of older women found cola consumption was associated with lower
bone mineral density and increased risk for osteoporosis. An expert at
the USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging suggests women
concerned about osteoporosis may want to steer away from drinking cola
until more study is conducted.
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Katherine Tucker, PhD, director of the Epidemiology
and Dietary Assessment Program at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition
Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, and colleagues have
reported the findings in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Tucker stresses that as with any epidemiological
study, the results should be taken with caution. “We are not certain why
women who drank more cola also had lower bone mineral density,” says
Tucker. Although adjustment for fruit juice intake did not change
results, women in the study who drank a considerable amount of cola not
only consumed less calcium, but less fruit juice as well. Previous
studies have also shown that low fruit and vegetable intake may affect
bone mineral density.
The message from experts is clear that overall
nutritional choices can affect bone health, but “there is no concrete
evidence that an occasional cola will harm the bones,” says Tucker.
“However, women concerned about osteoporosis may want to steer away from
frequent consumption of cola until further studies are conducted.”
According to the National Osteoporosis Foundation,
approximately 55 percent of Americans, mostly women, are at risk of
developing osteoporosis, a disease of porous and brittle bones that
causes higher susceptibility to bone fractures.
Tucker, also a professor at the Friedman School of
Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts, and colleagues analyzed dietary
questionnaires and bone mineral density measurements at the spine and
three different hip sites of more than 2,500 people in the Framingham
Osteoporosis Study whose average age was just below 60.
In women, cola consumption was associated with
lower bone mineral density at all three hip sites, regardless of factors
such as age, menopausal status, total calcium and vitamin D intake, or
use of cigarettes or alcohol.
However, cola consumption was not associated with
lower bone mineral density for men at the hip sites, or the spine for
either men or women. The results were similar for diet cola and,
although weaker, for decaffeinated cola as well.
Men reported drinking an average of six carbonated
drinks a week, with five being cola, and women reported consuming an
average of five carbonated drinks a week, four of which were cola.
Serving size was defined as one bottle, can or glass of cola. “The more
cola that women drank, the lower their bone mineral density was,” says
Tucker, who is corresponding author of the study. “However, we did not
see an association with bone mineral density loss for women who drank
carbonated beverages that were not cola.”
“Carbonated soft-drink consumption increased more
than three-fold” between 1960 and 1990, cite the authors. They also note
that more than 70 percent of the carbonated beverages consumed by people
in the study were colas, all of which contain phosphoric acid, an
ingredient that is not likely to be found in non-cola carbonated
beverages.
While previous studies have suggested that cola
contributes to bone mineral density loss because it replaces milk in the
diet, Tucker determined that women in the study who consumed higher
amounts of cola did not have a lower intake of milk than women who
consumed fewer colas.
However, the authors did conclude that calcium
intake from all sources, including non-dairy sources such as dark leafy
greens or beans, was lower for women who drank the most cola.
On average, women consumed 1,000 milligrams of
calcium per day, and men consumed 800 milligrams per day, both lower
than the daily recommended 1,200 daily milligrams for adults over age
50.
“Physiologically, a diet low in calcium and high in
phosphorus may promote bone loss, tipping the balance of bone remodeling
toward calcium loss from the bone. Although some studies have countered
that the amount of phosphoric acid in cola is negligible compared to
other dietary sources such as chicken or cheese,” Tucker says, “further
controlled studies should be conducted to determine whether habitual
cola drinkers may be adversely affecting their bone health by regularly
consuming doses of phosphoric acid that do not contain calcium or
another neutralizing ingredient.”
Editor's Notes:
Reference - Tucker, KL, Morita, K, Qiao N, Hannan
MT, Cupples A, Kiel DP. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
(October) 2006; 84(4). “Colas, but not other carbonated beverages, are
associated with low bone mineral density in older women: The Framingham
Osteoporosis Study.”
The Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of
Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University is the only independent
school of nutrition in the United States. The school’s eight centers,
which focus on questions relating to famine, hunger, poverty, and
communications, are renowned for the application of scientific research
to national and international policy. For two decades, the Jean Mayer
USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University has
studied the relationship between good nutrition and good health in aging
populations. Tufts research scientists work with federal agencies to
establish the USDA Dietary Guidelines, the Dietary Reference Intakes,
and other significant public policies.
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