'Coke is dominating my life (Diet Coke that is)': Father admits he has a problem after downing 18 cans A DAY

Equivalent of 42 litres a week costs him £3,000 a year

Habit is now so bad he can't leave house without a bottle with him

'When I don't have it my family says I'm a nightmare to be around'

A man has told how a lifelong addiction to Diet Coke has come to dominate his life.

Darren Jones, 38, can't go a day without downing 18 cans of the soft drink - the equivalent of 42 litres a week, costing him around £3,000 a year.



Over the past decade his habit has gradually worsened and now he can't leave the house without a bottle of Coca Cola.

I'll have a Coke: Darren Jones, 38, has been downing 18 cans a day for the past ten years - the equivalent of 42 litres a week

The father of two from Stockport insists his huge intake hasn't caused him any health problems. Furthermore he doesn't let his children drink the sugar-free soft drink

Astonishingly the father of two, from Stockport, Greater Manchester insists his huge intake - which amounts to 65,700 cans over the past ten years - hasn't caused him any medical or dental problems.

CAN DIET DRINKS ACTUALLY MAKE YOU FATTER ? Artificially sweetened diet drinks may actually cause you to pile on the pounds, say scientists.

A study review by Professor Qing Yang at Yale University found aspartame and saccharin both increased the desire to eat more.

The June 2010 paper found that artificial sweeteners can activate food reward brain centres without fully satisfying the resulting cravings.

So while the drinks themselves contain hardly any calories they may encourage consumers to reach for another treat afterwards.

But he did say that if he doesn't get his daily fix he can get moody and irritable.

He said: 'I don't really drink anything else. When I don't have it my family says I'm a nightmare to be around.'

Although he has bottles stored in his kitchen he doesn't let his children Abbie, seven, and James, six, drink the sugar-free soft drink.

Despite Mr Jones insisting that his addiction hasn't affected his health, health experts have warned otherwise.

Dr Vicci Owen-Smith, NHS Stockport's deputy director of public health, said: 'Diet Coke has artificial sweetener and contains caffeine. Too much of either of these may cause harm.'



In June, U.S. researchers confirmed artificial sweeteners and diet drinks cause weight gain, possibly by boosting a craving for sugary foods.

Diet Coke was first introduced in the U.S. on August 9, 1982, becoming the first new brand since 1886 to use the Coca-Cola trademark.



It was sweetened with aspartame, to save money, after the sweetener became available in the U.S. the following year.

A Coca-Cola spokesperson commented: 'Our packaging clearly shows caffeine, calorie and sugar content in relation to recommended daily guidelines.'

