Addicted to diet coke.. help :(
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It isn't really clear why men were not affected, and more studies need to be done.
https://health.clevelandclinic.org/2014/09/sodas-tea-and-coffee-which-can-lower-your-bone-density/
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It won't cause cancer or diabetes. However, if it's all you drink, the acidity is not fabulous for your teeth or your bone density. If you can cut back to like 3 cans a day that would be great. There are lots of noncaloric flavored drinks with lower acidity levels. I like the Arizona no calorie green tea, and also no calorie lemonade mixes. I don't like plain water either! Start experimenting with other flavors.0
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AnabolicMind2011 wrote: »
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.
Hydrochloric acid is secreted by the lining of your stomach.
Ascorbic acid is in citrus; commonly called vitamin C.
Acetic acid is a primary component of Apple Cider Vinegar.
Acetylsalicylic acid (also called Aspirin) is used to treat pain and in low doses as a blood thinner.
Any of these will react with the Calcium in teeth or bone, causing it to dissolve.
I have no idea what the safe limit of each of these is, so best to avoid all of them. Just sayin'
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I wonder if people who don't like plain water just have really crappy water supplies. My water is delicious. T_T0
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The toilet thing.... one time I was curious just to see if it really would get the toilet clean like all these silly articles claim. I dumped a can of Diet Coke into the toilet and left it in there for a few hours. Then I flushed it. Zero effect at all! Still had to get the Comet and scrub it the normal way. And no it wasn't ever super gross lol, we have hard water that quickly leaves deposits on all surfaces it contacts.3
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AnabolicMind2011 wrote: »
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.
Hydrochloric acid is secreted by the lining of your stomach.
Ascorbic acid is in citrus; commonly called vitamin C.
Acetic acid is a primary component of Apple Cider Vinegar.
Acetylsalicylic acid (also called Aspirin) is used to treat pain and in low doses as a blood thinner.
Any of these will react with the Calcium in teeth or bone, causing it to dissolve.
Just sayin'
That's fine. I dont understand your point. There are different toxiciy levels. Too much aspirin is bad and could cause an overdose. If you drank a lot of hydrochloric acid it might cause problems. Also if you drank a steady stream of vinegar or many other items it could throw off your body chemistry. If you read OP's first post she indicates she drinks 4 liters of cola a day.1 -
Even if we must debate bone density, it's true that very high soda consumption is awful for your teeth. Dental work is expensive and very not fun. That's enough for me to keep my consumption moderate. Who wants dental problems? bleah.1
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healthy491 wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »healthy491 wrote: »rainbowbow wrote: »doesn't cause weight gain, doesn't cause diabetes, doesn't cause cancer, etc. etc. etc.
The only worry i'd have consuming the amount you're talking about is the damage to your teeth or potential Reflux/Acid symptoms.
Really ? Thanks literally EVERYONE tells me how bad it is for my health and that I should stop
yeah, there is a lot of misinformation and ignorance out there when it comes to nutrition in general. There's a reason people still believe all kinds of crazy nonsense: "eat breakfast every day" "dont eat after 6" "you have to eat 6 small meals a day", i could go on.
Is it ideal to drink the amount you are? Especially for your teeth and stomach acid level? No, but it certainly doesn't have to be cut out completely. Learning to moderate your intake will be vital.
My suggestion is to force yourself to drink the same volume of water before drinking a diet coke. Want a 12 oz can of diet coke? Drink a 12 oz water first, if you still want a diet coke, then drink it. This will help cut down the volume pretty quickly.
Thanks a lot but the problem is I cant stand water.. it makes me sick
Can you drink flavored waters?0 -
Misinformation *nods*
I simply cannot tell if purposeful trolling with bro-science and inappropriate extrapolations though2 -
MissJanet55 wrote: »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.
I saw a lot of articles that say it is not harmful also. It is confusing because studies are inconclusive.
https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-drinks/artificial-sweeteners/
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MissJanet55 wrote: »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
Contrary to your characterization, this last is not "an FDA paper." It's a recitation of aggregated anecdotes that an outside party--a group called Aspartame Toxicity Information Center, so I'm inclined to doubt they are unbiased--filed with the FDA.
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MissJanet55 wrote: »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.
I saw a lot of articles that say it is not harmful also. But only time will tell.
Time has told.... It's fine.5 -
MissJanet55 wrote: »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.
I saw a lot of articles that say it is not harmful also. It is confusing because studies are inconclusive.
https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-drinks/artificial-sweeteners/
When a study is inconclusive you shouldn't conclude something from it. If you don't conclude anything then there is nothing to be confused by. Correlatives aren't causation but epidemiological studies can and will publish correlations and then speculate as to what they might mean, but when they speculate they make it clear that it they have no evidence of it as being causative. Its a "it might mean this". At that point its speculation and not science, which is fine, but you shouldn't draw conclusions from the speculations.
To test for causality you first need a possible model of HOW something would occur, as in HOW would aspartame, a methylester of a common dipeptide, induce something like insulin resistance. But to do that you have to come up with a reason first and thats rather hard when it doesn't really make sense that it would given what it is.
Aspartame is metabolically digested into methanol and the amino acids phenylalanine and aspartate within your stomach and no aspartame actually makes it intact into your blood. As for those breakdown products methanol is found in any fermented products or any products capable of fermentation, which includes things like fruit juices. In fact fruit juices have a much greater concentration of methanol naturally than you would ever get from the amount contained within a soda. Phenyalanine and asparate are just natural amino acids found in any protein. The amount you would get from a can of soda is about 5% of what you would get from eating just one chicken breast.
If consuming aspartame causes type 2 diabeties then one would expect so would consuming chicken or fruit juices because the metabolic products upon digestion are the same. It doesn't really make sense that it would.
I'm sure you have heard this before but correlation is not causation and you should not look at statistically significant correlations between A and B as evidence that A causes B. As long as you don't do that then there is no conflict in the literature. There are some publications speculating this and some speculating that but you shouldn't be concluding things from speculation and then acting upon that in your life, that is not the intent of speculation.9 -
Aaron_K123 wrote: »MissJanet55 wrote: »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.
I saw a lot of articles that say it is not harmful also. It is confusing because studies are inconclusive.
https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-drinks/artificial-sweeteners/
When a study is inconclusive you shouldn't conclude something from it. If you don't conclude anything then there is nothing to be confused by. Correlatives aren't causation but epidemiological studies can and will publish correlations and then speculate as to what they might mean, but when they speculate they make it clear that it they have no evidence of it as being causative. Its a "it might mean this". At that point its speculation and not science, which is fine, but you shouldn't draw conclusions from the speculations.
To test for causality you first need a possible model of HOW something would occur, as in HOW would aspartame, a methylester of a common dipeptide, induce something like insulin resistance. But to do that you have to come up with a reason first and thats rather hard when it doesn't really make sense that it would given what it is.
Aspartame is metabolically digested into methanol and the amino acids phenylalanine and aspartate within your stomach and no aspartame actually makes it intact into your blood. As for those breakdown products methanol is found in any fermented products or any products capable of fermentation, which includes things like fruit juices. In fact fruit juices have a much greater concentration of methanol naturally than you would ever get from the amount contained within a soda. Phenyalanine and asparate are just natural amino acids found in any protein. The amount you would get from a can of soda is about 5% of what you would get from eating just one chicken breast.
If consuming aspartame causes type 2 diabeties then one would expect so would consuming chicken or fruit juices because the metabolic products upon digestion are the same. It doesn't really make sense that it would.
I'm sure you have heard this before but correlation is not causation and you should not look at statistically significant correlations between A and B as evidence that A causes B. As long as you don't do that then there is no conflict in the literature. There are some publications speculating this and some speculating that but you shouldn't be concluding things from speculation and then acting upon that in your life, that is not the intent of speculation.
Have I told you lately that I love you
Have I told you there's noone above you
Dum Dee Dee
Edit to add...Need more coffee9 -
MissJanet55 wrote: »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.
I saw a lot of articles that say it is not harmful also. But only time will tell.
Time has told.... It's fine.
How long has it been now.... 50 years? 60?
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I've filled my 1.06 pt diet coke bottles with water problem is now I forgo the water for more diet coke. Definitely feels better to drink water after sweaty exercise than diet coke.1
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MissJanet55 wrote: »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.
I saw a lot of articles that say it is not harmful also. It is confusing because studies are inconclusive.
https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/healthy-drinks/artificial-sweeteners/
Oh! I read the Harvard article wrong. It says, "The health BENEFITS of diet drinks are inconclusive, with research showing mixed findings."
This article is referring to all artificial sweeteners not just the aspartame in a diet Coke.
I do worry about the toxins which are probably being handled well in smaller quantities, but what about any cumulative, long term effects?0 -
only bad thing about diet soda is that i can eat more after i drink it, even if im full to the top one can of diet pepsi and im good to go again0
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ogmomma2012 wrote: »I wonder if people who don't like plain water just have really crappy water supplies. My water is delicious. T_T
I think that this is probably true. I don't like the "taste" of my well water. You are very fortunate to have great water!1 -
Oh honey, I hear ya! Just look at my name!2
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