
Recent headlines suggest that those who drink diet soda are more likely to have cardiovascular problems, specifically stroke. Let's review some of the headlines:
"Diet pop can be hard on your heart"
"Want to have a stroke? Keep drinking diet sodas"
"Diet Drinks Help Waist, But Still Lead to Heart Problems, Stroke"
"Drinking diet pop might increase risk or stroke"

Does drinking diet soda really make you more likely to have a stroke? A stroke is damage to the brain due to a temporary interruption of the blood supply. It's very similar to the damage to the heart during a heart attack. What exactly is it in diet soda that makes it more likely for a stroke to happen? According to the articles this same risk isn't found in people who drink regular soda. So are we to assume that it's the artificial sweeteners?
This is a perfect example of preliminary "science" prevented as fact used as a scare tactic. Many news sources have gotten honest about the source of this information, but many others have not. Retractions or good explanations of the methods don't make headlines, but scare tactics do.
The correlation between diet soda and stroke was made in a poster presentation at the "International Stroke Conference." Poster presentations are not the same as peer reviewed medical journals and definitely do not carry the weight of medical consensus. This misinterpretation is not the fault of the scientists presenting the poster so much as the media drawing unsupported conclusions. Simply stated, the connection presented has not been studied enough to make the statements that a lot of news sources are making.

The news media and others reporting the "drinking diet soda = greater stroke risk" are jumping the gun. They're not interested in reality as much as a good story. A story that might frighten you, but will hopefully be forgotten until the next scary headline.
Is this ever done in dentistry? I think it is. I'll discuss that in another blog soon!

