The potential link between sugar-sweetened beverage consumption and post-exercise airway narrowing across puberty: a longitudinal cohort study

Public Health Nutr. 2016 Sep;19(13):2435-40. doi: 10.1017/S1368980015003109. Epub 2015 Oct 30.

Abstract

Objective: The prevalence of asthma is rising, presenting serious public health challenges. Recent data suggest that sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption plays a role in asthma aetiology. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether SSB consumption is linked to post-exercise airway narrowing (predictor of asthma development) across puberty.

Design: Participants completed pulmonary function tests, physical activity and dietary habit questionnaires, and an exercise test to exhaustion.

Setting: Community in Manhattan, Kansas, USA.

Subjects: We recruited ten boys and ten girls from an original cohort of forty participants tested in our laboratory approximately 5 years prior. Participants were aged 9·7 (sd 0·9) years at baseline and 14·7 (sd 0·9) years at follow-up.

Results: Pre-puberty, boys consumed 6·8 (sd 4·8) servings/week and girls consumed 6·9 (sd 3·7) servings/week, while post-puberty boys consumed 11·5 (sd 5·3) servings/week and girls consumed 7·7 (sd 4·3) servings/week. Using Pearson correlation, SSB consumption was not significantly related to post-exercise airway narrowing at pre-puberty (r=-0·35, P=0·130). In linear regression analyses, SSB consumption was significantly related to post-exercise airway narrowing post-puberty before (standardized β=-0·60, P=0·005) but not after (standardized β=-0·33, P=0·211) adjustment for confounders. Change in SSB consumption from pre- to post-puberty was significantly associated with post-exercise airway narrowing post-puberty (r=-0·61, P=0·010) and change in post-exercise airway narrowing from pre- to post-puberty (r=-0·45, P=0·048) when assessed via Pearson correlations.

Conclusions: These findings suggest a possible link between SSB consumption and asthma development during maturation. Reduced SSB intake may be a possible public health avenue for blunting rising asthma prevalence.

Keywords: Adolescence; Asthma; Bronchoconstriction; Diet; Sexual maturation; Soft drinks.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Asthma, Exercise-Induced / epidemiology*
  • Beverages*
  • Child
  • Cohort Studies
  • Dietary Sugars*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Male
  • Nutritive Sweeteners*
  • Puberty*

Substances

  • Dietary Sugars
  • Nutritive Sweeteners