| Literature DB >> 28829398 |
Johannes Naumann1, Diana Biehler2, Tania Lüty3, Catharina Sadaghiani4.
Abstract
We aim to present an overview of the possible influence of drinking water in general and mineral water in particular in improving glycemic parameters in persons with or without type 2 diabetes. We performed a literature search that produced 15 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on this topic with mainly small sample sizes. We also discuss relevant observational and animal studies as well as the effects of important supplements in mineral water such as hydrogencarbonate and magnesium. There is low evidence for the positive effects of water or mineral water in improving glycemic parameters in diabetic and non-diabetic persons, and the results are heterogenous, making it difficult to reach an unequivocal conclusion. Meta-analyses of prospective cohort studies and other observational studies, studies with animal models and interventional studies using hydrogencarbonate and magnesium supplements suggest a probable positive effect of drinking water and mineral water in particular on glycemic parameters, supporting the positive results found in some of the RCTs, especially those substituting diet beverages or caloric beverages with water, or those using bicarbonate and magnesium-rich water. Regarding the high prevalence, the associated suffering and the resulting health expenditures of type 2 diabetes, it is imperative to conduct larger and more rigorous trials to answer the question whether drinking water or mineral water can improve glycemic parameters in diabetic and non-diabetic persons.Entities:
Keywords: bicarbonate; diabetes; magnesium; mineral water; prevention; review; water intake
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28829398 PMCID: PMC5579707 DOI: 10.3390/nu9080914
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Search strategy.
| Search No. | Search Terms | Results | Search Fields |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | water | 819,017 | All Fields |
| 2 | glucose or glycemic or glycaemic or cholesterol | 733,923 | All Fields |
| 3 | drink* or consumption or beverage* | 188,224 | All Fields |
| 4 | study or trial* or review | 10,225,821 | All Fields |
| 5 | humans or women or men | 16,761,909 | All Fields |
| 6 | ((((water) AND ((glucose OR glycemic OR glycaemic OR cholesterol))) AND ((drink* OR consumption OR beverage*))) AND ((study OR trial* OR review))) AND (humans OR women OR men) | 1139 | All Fields |
Parameters for glycemic control.
| Parameters (with Normal Values) for Glycemic Control Reported in the Studies |
|---|
| (Product of fasting insulin (µU/mL) × fasting glucose (mg/dL))/405) |
| (Measure for blood glucose levels during the last 1 to 3 months) |
| (Measure for blood glucose levels in the last 2 to 4 weeks) |
| (Measure for blood glucose levels in the last 1 to 3 weeks) |
Figure 1Flow-chart of the literature search.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing water with other drinks or no drink.
| Author/y | Study Type | Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome | Results | Risk of Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tate et al., 2012 [ | RCT | 318 obese, BMI 36.3 kg/m2, 84% female, medium age 42 y, USA | Advice to replace more than 2 servings (each 350–500 mL) of caloric beverages per day with water for six months | CG1: Advice to replace more than 2 servings of caloric beverages per day with diet beverages | FPG (SO) | Water group had a sign. Increase of water consumption of 1 L after 3 months and 0.8 L after 6 months and a sign. Decrease of FPG compared to control group with no change of beverages after 3 and 6 months. | ITT, drop-outs 33/318 after 3 months and 46/318 after 6 months, no blinding |
| Madjd et al., 2015 [ | RCT | 62 healthy overweight and obese women, BMI 27–40 kg/m2, 18–50 y, non-smokers, participating in a weight loss program, Iran | 250 mL tap water (not specified) per day after lunch for 24 weeks | 250 mL diet beverage | FPG | Water group sign. more weight loss | No ITT, 9/71 drop-outs, measures of blinding not reported |
| Madjd et al., 2017 [ | RCT | 81 overweight and obese women, BMI 27–35 kg/m2 with type 2 diabetes HbA1c 6.5–7.2%, age 18–50 y, non-smokers, participating in a weight loss program with only metformin, Iran | 250 mL tap water (not specified) per day after lunch for 24 weeks | 250 mL diet beverage | FPG | Water group sign. more weight loss (−6.40 vs. −5.25 kg | ITT, 16/81 drop-outs, measures of blinding not reported |
| Tonstad et al., 2006 [ | RCT | 67 men and 27 post-menopausal women (total | 1 L tap water (not specified) per day for 4 weeks | CG1: 1 L blueberry juice | FPG | No sign. difference between groups after 4 weeks (exact data not presented) | No ITT, 5/99 drop-outs, no blinding, |
| Maersk et al., 2012 [ | RCT | 47 healthy overweight adults, 20–50 y, BMI 26–40 kg/m2, RR < 160/100, Denmark | 1 L uncarbonated water per day for 6 months | 1 L regular Cola (sucrose-sweetened) | FPG | No sign. difference for FPG | No ITT, 13/60 drop-outs, no blinding, sign. difference for sex at baseline (adjusted in analysis), randomization and allocation not reported |
| Mori et al., 2016 [ | RCT | 24 well controlled type 2 diabetes HbA1c < 8.5%, 19 men, 5 women, 40–70 y, regular alcohol intake women 20–30 g/day, men 30–40 g/day, Australia | Tap water (not specified) | CG1: red wine | FPG | No sign. difference for FPG | No ITT, 4/28 drop-outs, no blinding |
| Gepner et al., 2015 [ | RCT parallel 3 groups | 224 alcohol-abstaining adults type 2 diabetes, HbA1c 6.4–10%, Israel | 150 mL mineral water) per day in the evening for 2 years | CG1: 150 mL red wine | FPG | Water group sign. Increase of FPG and HOMA-IR compared to white wine. No sign. difference for HbA1c, fasting insulin and outcomes compared to red wine | ITT, no blinding |
| Rafraf et al., 2015 [ | RCT | 64 type 2 diabetes (males and females) | 150 mL hot water three times per day immediately after meals for 8 weeks. | 150 mL chamomile tea (3 g/150 mL hot water) | FPG | Chamomile tea group sign. Decrease for HbA1c ( | ITT, no drop-outs, single-blind, sign. difference for FPG, insulin and HOMA-IR at baseline, no PO specified |
CG: control group; PO: primary outcome; SO: secondary outcome; sign.: p < 0.05; RCT: randomized controlled trial; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; GTT: glucose tolerance test; CVRF: cardiovascular risk factors; y: years.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing low mineralized water with bicarbonate-rich water with low magnesium.
| Author/y | Study Type | Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome | Results | Risk of Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schoppen et al., 2004 [ | RCT crossover 2 groups | 18 healthy women, >1 postmenopausal, BMI < 30 kg/m2, Spain | 1 L per day for 2 months Bicarbonate-rich carbonated water: | Uncarbonated water: | FPG (SO) | Bicarbonate rich water sign. ( | ITT, 0/18 drop-outs, no blinding, randomization and allocation not reported |
| Toxqui & Vaquero, 2016 [ | RCT crossover 2 groups single-blind | 64 healthy adults | 1 L of the test water per day for 8 weeks followed by an 8-week washout period | Uncarbonated water: | FPG | No sign. difference for FPG | No ITT, 8/72 drop-outs, no blinding, |
| Pérez-Granados et al., 2010 [ | RCT crossover 2 groups | 18 healthy adults | 1 L of the test water per day for 8 weeks followed by an 8-week washout period | Carbonated water: | FPG | Bicarbonate-rich water decreased FPG not sign. ( | No ITT, 10/28 drop-outs, single blind, randomization and allocation not reported |
| Schorr et al., 1996 [ | RCT crossover 3 groups double-blind | 16 healthy adults | 1.5 L of the test water per day for 4 weeks with a 2-week washout period before the control water | Uncarbonated water: | FPG | No sign. difference between the groups. | No ITT, 5/21 drop-outs |
| Zair et al., 2013 [ | RCT crossover 2 groups double-blind | 12 healthy men, 20–60 y, BMI 18.5–25 kg/m2, Cholesterol 2.2–3 g/L, France | 1.25 L per day for 8 weeks | Carbonated water: | FPG (SO) | No sign. difference between the groups for FPG. | ITT, 0/12 drop-outs, randomization and allocation not reported, blinding difficult due to taste of water |
PO: primary outcome; SO: secondary outcome; sign.: p < 0.05; RCT: randomized controlled trial; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; GTT: glucose tolerance test; CVRF: cardiovascular risk factors; y: years.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing low mineralized water with bicarbonate-rich water with magnesium-rich water.
| Author/y | Study Type | Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome | Results | Risk of Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gutenbrunner, 1993 [ | RCT | 23 healthy men, 19–31 y, Germany | 1.4 L per day of the test waters for 28 days Bicarbonate and magnesium-rich carbonated water: | Uncarbonated water: | FPG | Bicarbonate and magnesium-rich water sign. decreased glucose tolerance and fructosamin compared to control water, but not FPG and fasting insulin. | No ITT, 1/24 drop-outs, single blind, randomization and allocation not reported |
| Murakami et al., 2015 [ | RCT | 19 healthy (7 men, 12 women), 47 y (26–59 y), Japan | 500 mL per day premeal, mineral or control water for one week in two cycles. The intervention lasted 4 weeks | Uncarbonated water: | FPG | Bicarbonate and magnesium-rich water sign. decreased glycoalbumin compared to control water. | No ITT, 7/26 drop-outs, no blinding |
CG: control group; PO: primary outcome; SO: secondary outcome; sign.: p < 0.05; RCT: randomized controlled trial; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; GTT: glucose tolerance test; CVRF: cardiovascular risk factors; y: years.