I admit it: I drink a Diet Pepsi just about every day. I love the stuff — with a meal, after a long run or when I’m just really thirsty. I’ve always justified the habit with the idea that at least I’m not consuming the huge amounts of sugar in a regular Pepsi. There are 69 grams of sugar and 250 calories in a 20-ounce Pepsi, according to the Pepsico website.
Now comes a study that threatens to shatter my carefully crafted self-delusion. Researchers examined data taken periodically for nearly 10 years from 749 Mexican-Americans and European-Americans ages 65 and older in the San Antonio Longitudinal Study of Aging (known by the fine acronym SALSA).
They determined that daily and occasional diet soda drinkers gained nearly three times as much belly fat as nondrinkers, after they ruled out other factors such as age, exercise and smoking. The diet soda drinkers added an average of .83 inch to their waist circumferences, while the nondrinkers added .3 inch. Daily consumers like me gained a striking 1.19 inches.
Men, European-Americans, people with a body mass index greater than 30 and people who did not have diabetes fared the worst.