Research reveals early humans weren’t meat-heavy eaters. Despite what social media trends claim, our ancestors relied heavily on plants.
Across the far right, a paranoid prophecy has been taking hold: the belief that globalist elites want to take meat off the ...
The study followed more than 120,000 adults over 10 years. None of them had liver disease when the research began. Over time, scientists tracked what the participants drank and also assessed their ...
Drinking diet soda or sugary drinks daily may increase the risk of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), a study presented at the United European Gastroenterology ...
A new study is shedding some light on how drinking soda affects your liver. And the results are not good, whether you drink regular soda or diet. This new study says drinking just one can of soda a ...
BERLIN — Diet drinks may not be “healthier” than sugary drinks when it comes to liver health. A large UK Biobank study found that higher intakes of both sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and low- and ...
Just one can a day of an artificially sweetened drink can lead to a higher risk of liver disease than its sugary equivalent, a major new study has found. Affecting over 30 per cent of people globally, ...
A new study is revealing that artificially sweetened drinks, like diet soda, can be just as bad — or worse — than beverages that contain sugar. As little as nine ounces of a sugary drink per day ...
You might want to skip your afternoon soda. Even moderate amounts of artificially sweetened and sugary drinks are both associated with an increased risk of liver disease, according to a new study. As ...
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 ...
People could be at higher risk of fatty liver disease from both sugary sodas and diet drinks, a new study says. In fact, artificially sweetened drinks might pose a greater threat to liver health than ...
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risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease by 60%, while drinking a sugary beverage could raise the risk by 50%, a new unpublished ...