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Sugary Drinks Raise Blood Pressure

The medical establishment continues to be wrongly obsessed with the link between blood pressure and salt intake, which only raises blood pressure about 1 point. A study in the journal Hypertension shows that the white powder they should really be concerned about is sugar — because sugar raises blood pressure three times more than salt!

Researchers analyzed health data from nearly 2,700 people in the U.S and the U.K. They found that those who drank the most sugary drinks had the highest blood pressure. Each additional sugary drink — either soda or fruit drink — raised systolic blood pressure by 1.6 mm/Hg. (Diet sodas didn't have the same effect.)

And the worse kind of sugar was fructose. Those with the highest intake of fructose had systolic pressure levels that were on average 3 to 4 points higher.

The bottom line is that drinking just one sugary soda has more impact on your blood pressure than all the salt you eat in a day!

Reference

"Sugary Drinks Could Boost BP," Medpage Today

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Some information on this site is from the book From Fatigued to Fantastic! Third Edition by Jacob Teitelbaum MD, copyright 2007 by Jacob Teitelbaum MD. Used by permission of Avery Publishing, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.