It's May 31, 2024, 10:19:55 PM
Shit, I used to be mad addicted to Coke (the drink). I'd get headaches and shit if I didn't have one. I'd have one w/ every meal. But I quit that shit after college and started drinking water exclusively when I was cutting weight. That was 3 years ago and now I can't stand any kind of soda. I can feel the shit on my teeth after I drink it. Plus it's way too sweet for me now. I don't even use it when I mix drinks anymore. I went from Crown and Coke to Crown and Water.
Quote from: Jrome Is The Truth on January 12, 2007, 06:20:16 PMShit, I used to be mad addicted to Coke (the drink). I'd get headaches and shit if I didn't have one. I'd have one w/ every meal. But I quit that shit after college and started drinking water exclusively when I was cutting weight. That was 3 years ago and now I can't stand any kind of soda. I can feel the shit on my teeth after I drink it. Plus it's way too sweet for me now. I don't even use it when I mix drinks anymore. I went from Crown and Coke to Crown and Water.crown and water is bomb.
Oh and another thing, I used to get heartburn like a motherfucker. Like I'd be poppin those 24 hour pills twice a day, and on top of that would wake up in the middle of the night to chew up some tums cuz my shit was so bad. After I quit drinkin pop that shit disappeared. I had no idea that it was causing it.Oh and fuck any artificial sweetners. That shit is horrible for you.
Health effectsOne study concluded that fructose "produced significantly higher fasting plasma triacylglycerol values than did the glucose diet in men" and "if plasma triacylglycerols are a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, then diets high in fructose may be undesirable"[7]. Bantle et al. "noted the same effects in a study of 14 healthy volunteers who sequentially ate a high-fructose diet and one almost devoid of the sugar." [3]A study in mice suggests that fructose increases obesity.[8] However, this study looked at the effects of fructose alone, and since high fructose corn syrup, like ordinary table sugar, is only about half fructose and half glucose, some may say they tell us very little about the relative health effects of high fructose corn syrup as opposed to other sweeteners. These same people must argue that the added sucrose somehow cancels out the reported negative effects of fructose intake. No such study has shown this cancellation happens.One much-publicized recent study found an association between obesity and high HFCS consumption, especially from soft drinks.[9] However, this study did not provide any evidence that this association is causal. And in fact, one of the study coauthors, Dr. Barry M. Popkin, is quoted in the New York Times (July 2, 2006, A Sweetener With a Bad Rap) warning that I don't think there should be a perception that high-fructose corn syrup has caused obesity until we know more. Most experts would agree that, in terms of obesity-related physiology, HFCS is no better or worse than sucrose. In the same article, Walter Willets, chair of the nutrition deperatment of the Harvard School of Public Health Nutrition Department Chairman, is quoted as saying that There's no substantial evidence to support the idea that high-fructose corn syrup is somehow responsible for obesity, and that If there was no high-fructose corn syrup, I don't think we would see a change in anything important. In essence he is saying high fructose corn syrup is just as bad as other sugars. Walter Willets also recommends drinking water over soft drinks containing sugars or high fructose corn syrup.[10]
Sikotic: Plasma triacylglyceroses is way beyond my education in biology, but what I can tell is that I've heard about fructose increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease, but check out how many things do that. Smoking, working too much and fucking yourself up with it, not doing sports, having high blood pressure, being overweight, all of that is worse from what I knowThe type of diabetes your diet has an influence on (there's other types of the disease, getting which is just bad luck, more or less) usually come after obesity...as long as you're skinny, you're not likely to get that type of diabetes from drinking soda, eating sweets or smoking, or whatever increases the risk.I drink coke like a motherfucker too, often I have coke along with lunch, coke along with dinner, coke before going to bed, and so on. Since I'm very slim (I am actually incapable of putting on weight), I don't think there's gonna be consequences in the short run. Sure I could be wrong, but I think I'd have to start worrying if I started getting chubby. Just watch out for what it does to your teeth though........