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Addicted to diet coke.. help :(

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Replies

  • Posts: 18,343 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »

    The kindergarten teachers use Coca Cola to clean dried paste off of scissors. It makes a great cleaner.

    Google "gastric acid" (you know, the stuff that's in your stomach 24 hours a day for your entire life) and see how acidic it is.
  • Posts: 5,468 Member
    I want the black version. Love this.
    queenliz99 wrote: »
    jsw60tb7cx0y.jpeg
    I got the girl version! Yay me!

  • Posts: 15,317 Member
    I want the black version. Love this.

    Googling now!
  • Posts: 457 Member
    I'm not one to argue on internet forums, but there is a lot of documentation.

    This science paper:
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474447/
    And this piece on safefood, although this group obviously has a point of view:
    http://www.safefood.org.nz/aspartaddict.html
    An FDA paper on aspartame toxicity:
    http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dailys/03/jan03/012203/02p-0317_emc-000199.txt

    And many more. There are also pieces saying it is perfectly safe, so pick your poison. But one thing is sure - giving it up is not going to hurt you.


  • Posts: 2,578 Member
    Aaron_K123 wrote: »

    Did you actually read the study or did you stop at the title? Perhaps point to the place within the study where you feel they demonstrate a causative effect between drinking diet soda and weight gain or the development of type 2 diabeties. Or perhaps point out the part of this study where they provide the mechanism by which that would happen given that aspartame is just a methylated dipeptide.

    It won't impact me because I try to avoid it. That is great if everything is okay. I will be happy for everyone addicted to diet Coke. I have heard mixed reports.
  • Posts: 2,578 Member
    Aaron, did you read the results in the article?
  • Posts: 15,317 Member
    I want the black version. Love this.

    Etsy!! and it is also in black!!

    https://www.etsy.com/listing/266492496/science-doesnt-give-a-*kitten*-what-you?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=shopping_us_d-clothing-womens_clothing-tops_and_tees&utm_custom1=e9df5a19-3a54-4cec-acae-67d5914cf1f6&gclid=CjwKEAjw3Nq9BRCw8OD6s4eI5HASJABsfCIaPUL0mqUYuK8tj3zMNjdLwwPbQuYu1PdMmDLokKHIvBoCiIHw_wcB
  • Posts: 470 Member
    edwardetr wrote: »
    Try a soda stream to carbonate your water and add a little of whatever flavoring you like. I like drinking carbonated water more than still.

    So you're basically saying to replace flavored carbonated water with a different flavored carbonated water. Good idea.
  • Posts: 1,804 Member
    edited August 2016
    rankinsect wrote: »

    Teeth? Sure. Bone? Not a chance. To actually weaken bone via acidity, your blood pH would need to fall below 5.5 - which is far beyond the lethal level. Normal body pH is incredibly tightly regulated.

    For that matter, acidic drinks are not going to increase stomach acidity, because you'd never swallow anything more acidic than your stomach acid - whatever you drink is going to reduce the acidity of your stomach contents. Actual acidosis tends to be caused by either kidney damage or poisoning, such as by drinking methanol, or by severe oxygen deprivation, not by consumption of acidic drinks.

    http://www.webmd.com/osteoporosis/features/soda-osteoporosis ("Researchers at Tufts University, studying several thousand men and women, found that women who regularly drank cola-based sodas -- three or more a day -- had almost 4% lower bone mineral density in the hip, even though researchers controlled for calcium and vitamin D intake.")

    http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/84/4/936.full

    It's not via acidity. If occurring, it's probably via co-ordination (a broad category of interactions including chelation). And, no, not every phosphorus containing compound would have this effect. It would be limited to phosphoric acid and the related phosphates in which there are free oxygen atoms available to co-ordinate to the calcium. It appears that the caffeine may also be a contributing factor (since the noncola sodas were not shown to give the same reduced bone density).

    Anyway, I managed to drastically reduce (but not eliminate) my diet soda intake by replacing it with flavoured waters (e.g. Crystal Light) which I increasingly diluted. I was able to get myself up to about half my intake being water, most of the rest being flavoured water or home brewed iced tea, with one or two diet sodas a day as well.

    I wouldn't have been worried if the OP said she was drinking half a liter a day, but 4 liters a day is going to be very hard on the teeth and may increase her risk of osteoperosis.

  • Posts: 15,532 Member
    @queenliz99 @cerise_noir

    This is where I go for my geek wear:

    http://www.thinkgeek.com/
  • Posts: 15,317 Member
    nutmegoreo wrote: »
    @queenliz99 @cerise_noir

    This is where I go for my geek wear:

    http://www.thinkgeek.com/

    Awesome!
  • Posts: 260 Member
    I have drastically cut down over the last 2 months or so and I was addicted! I was about to go shopping for more and said to myself 'I drink too much of it, I need to drink more water'. I also wanted to save some money. I decided that I wouldn't have it in the house but that I would not cut it our of my life. If I wanted diet coke, I would have to go and buy it in a litre bottle at the shop. I told myself I should feel no guilt about wanting to drink it. I end up drinking water because there is nothing else and I can't be bothered going to the shops. I also stopped buying sparkling water... just water now. I did get massive headaches for about a week but it's all good now. There have been a few times when the craving came and I went and got some and enjoyed it! I drink it at restaurants too. It's like chips and chocolate for me... just don't have it in the house and you find alternatives.
  • Posts: 2,578 Member
    edited August 2016

    I'm not sure why you continue to comment on these types of threads. People are asking for help. Spreading misinformation isn't helping. Maybe learn the facts for yourself before posting because it's extremely unfair to newcomers that you continue to do this.

    It isn't misinformation. Phosphoric acid is in Coca Cola. It dissolves your teeth and studies suggest that it could possibly cause osteoporosis over time with women.

    I'm not saying a glass or two a day would necessarily hurt someone. I have no idea what safe limits are. But some people drink 2 liters or even a 6 pack or more a day.
  • Posts: 1,520 Member
    DebSozo wrote: »

    It isn't misinformation. Phosphoric acid is in Coca Cola. It dissolves your teeth and studies suggest that it could possibly cause osteoporosis over time with women.

    I'm not saying a glass or two a day would necessarily hurt someone. I have no idea what safe limits are. But some people drink 2 liters or even a 6 pack or more a day.
    Sincere curiosity, why is it that only women seem to be susceptible to osteoporosis but not men, if the risks seem to be so high in your opinion? What is it about men that protects them from bone damage?
  • Posts: 2,578 Member
    Sincere curiosity, why is it that only women seem to be susceptible to osteoporosis but not men, if the risks seem to be so high in your opinion? What is it about men that protects them from bone damage?

    That is what the study found. Women were impacted. I don't know what protects them!
This discussion has been closed.