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Root beer is be the safest soft drink for your teeth, new research suggests, but drinking many other sodas is almost like pouring battery acid on them. ... "The bottom line is that the acidity in all soft drinks is enough to damage your teeth and should be avoided," Ross said in a prepared statement.
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www.livescience.com/health/070321_soda_teeth.html
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Thus people who are suffering from acidity should not be drinking soft drinks because actually it increases acidity further. Effect on Kidneys: ; Kidneys are less able to excrete phosphoric acid when it is in excess.
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www.ameinfo.com/26590.html
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1. Soft drinks steal water from the body. They work very much like a diuretic which takes away more water than it provides to the body. Just to process the high levels of sugar in soft drinks steals a considerable amount of water from the body.
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www.watershed.net/top10sd.aspx
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According to this email flier, the acidity of Coke and Pepsi makes both soft drinks a health hazard, not to mention darned good household cleaners ... For your info: The average pH of soft drinks, e.g. Coke, Pepsi is pH 3.4. This acidity is strong enough to dissolve teeth and bones!
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urbanlegends.about.com/library/bl_coca_cola.htm
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Thursday, May 04, 2006 ... pH level (the lower it is, the worse, or more acidic, it is); Water - 7.00; Barq's - 4.61; Diet Barq's - 4.55; Diet7up - 3.67; Sprite - 3.42; Diet Dr. Pepper - 3.41; Diet Coke - 3.39; Diet Mountain Dew - 3.34; Mount Dew - 3.22; ... Bonnie comments on soft drink bottlers mea culpa...
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nutritionalconcepts.blogspot.com/2006/05/acidity-in-sof...
nutritionalconcepts.blogspot.com/2006/05/acidity-in-soft-drinks-and-other.html
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Soft drinks have subversive and destructive physiological consequences that contribute to early aging. In the 1500’s, the Spanish colonists noted how the Indians of South America were able to allay fatigue by chewing ... Another not-so-obvious harmful effect of low stomach acidity is the overgrowth of harmful bacteria,
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tuberose.com/Soft_Drinks.html
tuberose.com/Soft_Drinks.html
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I am doing a project on the acidity of soft drinks and I would like to know if I was to titrate a solution of soft drink + concentrated sulphuric acid(4N) against a solution of 4N sodium hydroxide is the formula N1V1 + N2V2 = N3V3 applicable to find the normality of soft drink used.
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www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/chem00/chem00210.htm
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Increased acidity: Another common problem found is increased acid levels throughout the body. Soft drinks have a high acidic pH. When large quantities are consumed they disturb the delicate acid alkaline balance of the stomach.
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www.buzzle.com/editorials/8-23-2004-58291.asp
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While the acidity in all soft drinks is enough to damage your teeth, Root Beer products may be better than diet soft drinks for reducing tooth erosion. Root beer is non-carbonated and according to a recent report in General Dentistry, does not contain the acids that harm teeth. ... Exposing teeth to soft drinks,
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www.colgate.com/app/Colgate/US/OC/Information/ADA/Artic...
www.colgate.com/app/Colgate/US/OC/Information/ADA/Article_2007_06_ADARootBeerSafe.cvsp
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