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  1. Join Date
    Oct 2012
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    4,851
    #51
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    ikaw kasi.
    kung anu-ano ang tinitikman mo.
    hayan... nagka-duleng-duleng ang dila mo.
    heh heh.
    Malamang nasunog dili nyan sa 50s na natikman…[emoji1787][emoji1787][emoji1787]

    BTT: coke in can dito sweetener na din… kahit naka lagay sa lata original taste


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  2. Join Date
    Sep 2015
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    13,919
    #52
    Quote Originally Posted by _Cathy_ View Post
    Bagay nga yung lasa ng manok sa baka kaya masarap e. Hindi mo maintindihan yun?
    Quote Originally Posted by ray_noel View Post
    So kags, parang sinasabi mo na bakit mag baka pa eh bumili na lang ng manok kasi same lang naman ng lasa?
    Sinasaib ko lang na its not a new taste. Kung baga walang dapat ikagulat. Yung mga una nagpost sa facebook mga bayaran yun tapos nacurious na tao.


    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    ikaw kasi.
    kung anu-ano ang tinitikman mo.
    hayan... nagka-duleng-duleng ang dila mo.
    heh heh.

    doc may limitations ako. No htiing below the belt.

  3. Join Date
    Sep 2015
    Posts
    13,919
    #53
    huhLuuuuhhh..... pepsi black & coke zero kills the brain.

    doc d, where are you scoobydooo...

    stroke na magiigng demented pa!!!! Juicecolred sa takot sa asukal mas naleche pa.

    kagalingan so right again.




    Best LifeBest Life
    Drinking This Once a Day Can Triple Your Stroke Risk, Study Finds
    Kali Coleman
    Thu, 5 August 2021, 8:02 PM


    More than three quarters of first-time stroke patients have high blood pressure, the American Heart Association (AHA) reports. Their data shows that 77 percent of first-time stroke suffers' have blood pressure higher than 140/90 mmHg, whereas normal is considered less than 120/80 mmHg, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That's why doctors say the best way to avoid a stroke is to lower your blood pressure, and the best way lower your blood pressure is to change what you eat and drink. But even if you're cutting back on salt and alcohol, there are other common foods and drinks that could be putting you at risk of this deadly health condition. One study found that another popular beverage can triple your stroke risk if you drink it just once a day, even though it's often marketed as a healthier option. Read on to find out which drink you may want to cut back on.

    Drinking at least one diet soda a day can triple your stroke risk, research shows.

    Researchers from the Boston University School of Medicine looked at the long-term health impact of drinking artificially sweetened beverages, publishing their results in 2017 in the journal Stroke. The researchers analyzed nearly 3,000 participants over the age of 45 for strokes over the course of 10 years, gauging their beverage intake through a food-frequency questionnaire. According to their findings, the participants who drank at least one diet soda a day were nearly twice as likely to have a stroke than those who didn't drink diet soda, but they were three times as likely to develop an ischemic stroke, in particular.

    "Our study provides further evidence to link consumption of artificially sweetened beverages with the risk of stroke, particularly ischemic stroke," the researchers said.

    The study also found that daily diet soda drinkers were three times more likely to develop dementia.

    These Boston University School of Medicine researchers also observed nearly 1,500 participants over the age of 60 for the development of dementia in correlation with diet soda consumption. According to their findings, people who drank at least one artificially sweetened beverage a day were three times as likely to develop dementia due to Alzheimer's disease than those who did not consume diet soda. "Our study is the first to report an association between daily intake of artificially sweetened soft drink and an increased risk of both all-cause dementia and dementia because of Alzheimer's disease (AD)," the researchers said.

    Researchers say diet sodas should not be promoted as a healthy alternative to regular soda.

    The scientists behind the study said further research needs to be conducted to determine why there was an increased risk for both stroke and dementia in regular diet soda drinkers. But in an AHA editorial accompanying the 2017 study, Ralph Sacco, MD, a former president of the AHA and the chairman of the Department of Neurology at the Miller School of Medicine at University of Miami in Florida, said that the main problem is that artificially sweetened beverages (ASBs) are "marketed as healthier alternatives" to sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs). ( A big haller to all of you hahahahah)

    "The American Heart Association and American Diabetes Association have given a cautious nod to the use of artificial sweeteners in place of sugar to combat obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes mellitus, but there is still uncertainty about the benefits and even healthfulness of ASBs," Sacco said. According to the AHA, several large studies, including the 2017 report, have linked diet sodas to concerning health conditions, including type 2 diabetes, heart attack, and vascular death, in addition to stroke and dementia.

    "The growing number of epidemiological studies showing strong associations between frequent consumption of ASBs and vascular outcomes, however, suggests that it may not be reasonable to substitute or promote ASBs as healthier alternatives to SSBs," Sacco explained. "Both sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened soft drinks may be hard on the brain."

    People should also avoid sweetened beverages altogether.

    The study did not find a similar increased risk for sugar-sweetened soda in terms of stroke or dementia, (bang bang bang!!! ) however, Matthew Pase, PhD, the lead author of the study, said in a statement that this may be because people do not drink sweetened sodas as often as diet sodas. He added that, "although we did not find an association between stroke or dementia and the consumption of sugary drinks, this certainly does not mean they are a healthy option."

    "We know that limiting added sugars is an important strategy to support good nutrition and healthy body weights, and until we know more, people should use artificially sweetened drinks cautiously. They may have a role for people with diabetes and in weight loss, but we encourage people to drink water, low-fat milk or other beverages without added sweeteners," Rachel K. Johnson, MPH, a former chair of the AHA's Nutrition Committee and professor of nutrition at the University of Vermont, said in a statement.

    Drinking This Once a Day Can Triple Your Stroke Risk, Study Finds

  4. Join Date
    Oct 2012
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    27,624
    #54
    Writer seems to rehash that 1 study in 2017....

  5. Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    52,958
    #55
    Quote Originally Posted by StockEngine View Post
    Writer seems to rehash that 1 study in 2017....
    if it worked then,
    it will still work today.

    even in the medical literature,
    many articles quote many previous works,
    but when one lists them down,
    one would come to the conclusion that they are quoting only a few so-called landmark works.

  6. Join Date
    Oct 2012
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    27,624
    #56
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    if it worked then,
    it will still work today.

    even in the medical literature,
    many articles quote many previous works,
    but when one lists them down,
    one would come to the conclusion that they are quoting only a few so-called landmark works.
    the sample size is too small. and their study is pre 2000 ... released on 2017.

  7. Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    52,958
    #57
    Quote Originally Posted by StockEngine View Post
    the sample size is too small. and their study is pre 2000 ... released on 2017.
    it is up to the astute reader, to determine for himself, whether or not, said article is worthy of his bother.

    "there's a lot of garbage in the internet, being passed off as Bible truth. be aware!"

  8. Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    27,624
    #58
    Quote Originally Posted by dr. d View Post
    it is up to the astute reader, to determine for himself, whether or not, said article is worthy of his bother.

    "there's a lot of garbage in the internet, being passed off as Bible truth. be aware!"
    I don't like yahoo and this article seems like its trying to "shake" some folks.

  9. Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    52,958
    #59
    Quote Originally Posted by StockEngine View Post
    I don't like yahoo and this article seems like its trying to "shake" some folks.
    if one wishes to search for "more reliable" literature,
    search among those from established learning centers, i.e., universities with honorable prestige and provenance..
    but some of these university-based literature do tend to be very boringly written.
    their target audience kasi, are fellow scientists and not commoners like you and me.
    transcripts from these scientific publications, written for the man on the street and published by mass-readership volumes (magazines and such)... sometimes, something vital is lost in the translation.
    heh heh.
    Last edited by dr. d; August 8th, 2021 at 06:19 PM.

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High Fructose Corn Syrup - Ito na ginagamit sweetener sa softdrinks and juices