It appears as though there may be a risk to drinking Diet Soda after all, although it has nothing to do with the alleged risk of obesity. Rather, there is evidence to suggest that drinking dark-colored diet cola (and dark-colored regular cola) can increase your risk of kidney disease. Based on a report published in the journal Epidemiology, drinking two or more dark-colored sodas -- such as Coke, Pepsi, Dr. Pepper, and similar generic brands -- per day doubles your chances of kidney disease. The phosphoric acid found in dark colas, but not in clear sodas such as Sprite and 7-Up, is what gives it its unique taste, but also what may lead to the development of kidney stones. This, in turn, can potentially lead to complications and disease.
Yes because the dark soda has more carbon nation
yes there are but only in dark soda's not in light soda like sprite
yes there are but only in dark soda's not in light soda like Sprite
No. Unless adding ice cubes to soda means you drink less soda.
sprite because it is a light soda drink so it dose not have the dark compounds in them,
Dark sodas remove tarnish better than light colored sodas because of the citric acid and high sugar amounts in the soda. The darker the soda, the more acid is put into the soda.
No, the color of the soda does not affect how quickly it can remove corrosion from a penny. The key factor is the acidic content in the soda, which helps to dissolve the corrosion on the penny. Both light and dark-colored sodas can be effective at cleaning pennies due to their acidic nature.
its not.
No!
Yes, The word diet in diet coke may throw you off. Diet sounds healthy, but with lipid in it, it makes the drink less healthy.
Soda is not healthy to drink because it sabotages optimal health in a lot of ways.
None, neither of them are healthier because diet has less sugar but more aspartame and then regular soda has mire sugar. But usually people would go for the diet.