aniciete
Member
I know 19-20 year olds that eat zogslop for every meal yet they have perfect skin and look healthy.
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I can’t imagine the amount of heavy metals she has been accumulating. She is too young to gauge the longterm effects of this ignorant habit. All those empty calories will be causing health problems in the future, and the aging effect from the all that phosphorus will play out. We don’t even know if this story is even true. People will fake anything to get their 15 minutes of fame. Drinking 2 cokes every hour for 15 hours in a day with all that carbonation would be so filling and leave hardly any room for food. The carbonation alone would rot her teeth out.
Aluminum from the aluminum cans, that the woman in the video drinks, and forever plastics from the plastic bottles. Glass is best….Hi, what is the heavy metal in coke or all carbonated drinks?
Aluminum from the aluminum cans, that the woman in the video drinks, and forever plastics from the plastic bottles. Glass is best….
It is common sense. I just picked the first two that showed up on Google.Aluminium is a light metal.
The two links you gave are not really relevant to coke bottles. The first is about beverages in Nigeria, which are compared to western standards in the study.
The second is about all kinds of beverages, and in those tests "plant-based milks and mixed-fruit juices contained the most amount of toxic metals".
She may have issues with heavy metals, but probably more due to a lack of protective nutrients that aid in detox.
I don’t think the cans are “as bad” with non-acidic and non-carbonated things in them, unless they have citric acid in them. Acidity and carbonations erodes the at the metal and plastics.Thank you for that. I forogt about aluminum can. Right now im drinking carbonated water with pure sugar but in a plastic bottle. I will check where to get in glass bottle.
How about fresh milk in carton box but inside is aluminum like the tetra pak ?
@Rinse & rePeat
It is common sense. I just picked the first two that showed up on Google.
The Al content rose with increasing acid concentration and decreasing pH value of the soft drinks. The evaluated possible daily intake of Al (0.8 mg) through consumption of these drinks was practically negligible in relation to total daily dietary Al intake, as well as to tolerable daily intake. Thus, soft drinks from Al cans are an insignificant source of dietary Al intake and it appears that the Al intake from this source should not be a cause for concern in regard to Al toxicity for the human body.
Cola drinks averaged 24.4 mumol/L from cans and 8.9 mumol/L from bottles, whereas beer in cans or bottles averaged about 6 mumol/L.
In summary, cocoa powder and chocolate count amongst those foods that showed the highest aluminium concentrations found in this study (Table 3). Schlegel and Richter analysed ten cocoa and chocolate samples and found between 50 and 150 mg/kg aluminium concentrations which is within the same range as the values found in the present study.
I don’t eat much chocolate anymore since hearing about it’s heavy metals. I don’t think the aluminum in a couple ounces of chocolate once in awhile compares to a woman drinking 30 aluminum cans worth of soda a day. Chocolate doesn’t rot your teeth either, and offers good minerals as well.Regarding aluminium, I was curious about the ingested amount, so here are a couple studies that look at the health implications of acidic drinks in aluminium cans:
Aluminium content of soft drinks from aluminium cans - PubMed
The aluminium (Al) content of soft drinks from Al cans has been measured during 12 months of storage, by the graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry (GFAAS) method. The results show that the Al content in all soft drinks increased during the whole storage time. This increase was a...pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
1L aluminium-bottled cola contains between 0.1 and 0.8 mg aluminium, depending on corrosion/age. Average daily aluminium intake is around 25mg.
Aluminium beverage cans as a dietary source of aluminium - PubMed
In general, the aluminium content of beverages from aluminium cans was higher than that from glass containers, and it rose with decreasing pH. Within a given category there was a wide variation in aluminium content. If the speculative link between aluminium intake and Alzheimer's disease is...pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
In contrast, cocoa is extremely high in aluminium:
Aluminium content of selected foods and food products - Environmental Sciences Europe
For many years aluminium was not considered harmful to human health because of its relatively low bioavailability. In 1965, however, animal experiments suggested a possible connection between aluminium and Alzheimer's disease.Oral intake of foodstuffs would appear to be the most important source...enveurope.springeropen.com
A bar of chocolate can thus have 15 mg aluminium. I doubt the aluminium content of both chocolate and cola are problematic.
Exactly!I don’t post or reply much at all on this forum over the years, but I just have to say that at my ripe old age of 70, I can tell you from watching many people get away with terrible dietary habits for many years that it catches up with them eventually and when it does, it’s in a big way. There is a hefty price to pay for abusing your body like this. People may be fooled into thinking it is possible to abuse yourself like this without repercussions, but that’s only for a time when people are young. As they age, the body cannot compensate anymore. I. The piper will have to be paid eventually.
I don’t eat much chocolate anymore since hearing about it’s heavy metals. I don’t think the aluminum in a couple ounces of chocolate once in awhile compares to a woman drinking 30 aluminum cans worth of soda a day. Chocolate doesn’t rot your teeth either, and offers good minerals as well.
Must be low from the plastic liner in the carbonated beverages…My posts were in reply to your comment about dangerous amounts of aluminium in canned cola. Actually, there are no dangerous amounts of aluminium or any other metal in canned cola.
When you compare reasonable chocolate intake of maybe 30g per day to reasonable cola intake of 1L per day, you have up to 5mg aluminium vs. up to 0.8mg.
So there are many issues with large amounts of cola, but aluminium is none of them.
truthShe doesn't look great. She is young and healthy and gets away with almost anything at this stage. She looks way older than 20, which she is.