I put a (stupidly unnecessary it seems) moratorium on my children eating rice because of this scare story, others may have done the same. It also speaks volumes about the quality of popular health reporting in general.
"I'm beginning to suspect someone confused a mg/mcg/μg somewhere; that seems like the Occam's razor explanation..."
"But something doesn't quite add up... which if true would contradict the FDA's results... What are we (or I) missing?"
"It doesn't make sense to me either. If the FDA found n.d. levels of lead in all their samples, you would expect some of the new study's samples to have low levels as well."
"Right, the low end of the range should be much lower. Right now, my money is on a units error."
>Meh, it's hard to undo heavy metal poisoning. You can lift the embargo against the rice with no permanent harm done.
I think I made the logical choice at the time, based on the info available, by stopping rice. For my wife, the inconvenience of replacing our primary form of starch outweighed the long-term risks of brain damage to the children (most people do seem to be short-term thinkers), and it was a hard sell.
I am now regarded as The Boy Who Cried Wolf. Even if, say, arsenic was found to be a problem in rice, it will be difficult convincing anyone else.
I don't eat rice from mainland china if I can avoid it; I prefer Thai or Taiwanese rice when available. Of course, this can be very hard considering that 99% of the restaurants don't have anything else.
My understanding of arsenic poisoning is that it binds to some proteins that inhibit some processes in cells. This means it eventually gets cleared from the system. So as long as you don't get a lethal dose it shouldn't cause long term damage. There is arsenic in apples seeds and I've never heard of long term issues from eating a few of those.
Lead on the other hand builds up in your system and causes permanent damage.
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[ 2.5 ms ] story [ 24.4 ms ] threadI put a (stupidly unnecessary it seems) moratorium on my children eating rice because of this scare story, others may have done the same. It also speaks volumes about the quality of popular health reporting in general.
"I'm beginning to suspect someone confused a mg/mcg/μg somewhere; that seems like the Occam's razor explanation..."
"But something doesn't quite add up... which if true would contradict the FDA's results... What are we (or I) missing?"
"It doesn't make sense to me either. If the FDA found n.d. levels of lead in all their samples, you would expect some of the new study's samples to have low levels as well."
"Right, the low end of the range should be much lower. Right now, my money is on a units error."
Meh, it's hard to undo heavy metal poisoning. You can lift the embargo against the rice with no permanent harm done.
I'm surprised this guy didn't catch his error. He should have known something was up when his control sample also tested too high, or changed.
I think I made the logical choice at the time, based on the info available, by stopping rice. For my wife, the inconvenience of replacing our primary form of starch outweighed the long-term risks of brain damage to the children (most people do seem to be short-term thinkers), and it was a hard sell.
I am now regarded as The Boy Who Cried Wolf. Even if, say, arsenic was found to be a problem in rice, it will be difficult convincing anyone else.
The harm done is the loss of credibility.
secondary commentary on the article: http://chriskresser.com/arsenic-in-rice-how-concerned-should...
Lead on the other hand builds up in your system and causes permanent damage.
That's for two reasons:
1: Because almost no one eats apple seeds - even if you swallow them, they probably pass through unchanged.
And, 2: There is no arsenic in apple seeds! It has cyanide - which is a totally different thing.