Eau Bother

This is why you should stop drinking sparkling water

There are two very good reasons the fizzy tipple is not as healthy as you think

IF you’re on a health kick, sparkling water may well be your tipple of choice.

It’s good for your health and your figure, right?

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Sparkling water is often seen as the healthy option

It turns out that there are two very good reasons why it’s not as healthy as you think.

According to experts, carbonated water can rot your teeth and make you fat.

The bubbles  come  from adding carbon dioxide under pressure, and the result is water that contains weak carbonic acid.

Adam Thorne, a dentist in London’s Harley Street,  said that can have a damaging effect on your teeth.

He told the: “Most people have no idea that fizzy water is extremely acidic, it’s pH3 on the acidity scale.

“The bubbles erode your tooth enamel – and over time this causes painful, yellow cracked teeth.”

However US expert Edmond R. Hewlett, spokesperson for the American Dental Association, disagrees.

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Fizzy water may cause tooth erosion and weight gain

He told that the unflavoured water is fine, and that it is added flavourings that make it more acidic.

He said: “It is the flavouring and not the carbonation that lowers the pH (increases the acidity) to a level that can potentially erode tooth enamel with frequent consumption.

“Laboratory studies have shown that (unflavoured) waters, be they still or sparkling, have very low erosive potential and do not pose a risk to tooth enamel.”

However he did concede that more research needs to be done to assess the effect of plain sparkling water.

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Earlier this year, scientists revealed that fizzy water could actually make you fatter, even though it has no calories.

Research suggests that the carbon dioxide in the drink can make you feel more empty than you are and trigger a “hunger hormone.”

This means you end up eating more than you would have done if you had swigged some still water instead.

Scientists from Birzeit University in the Palestinian West noting that the hunger hormone ghrelin spikes in people after drinking sparkling water.

People who had sparkling water for breakfast were found to have six times the ghrelin level of those who had still water.

Last year we revealed that your zero calorie diet drink can also make you pile on the pounds, by messing with the bacteria in your gut.

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The bubbles make the drink acidic and trigger the hunger hormone
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