Please find a controversial magazine, newspaper or social media headline involvi
ID: 304912 • Letter: P
Question
Please find a controversial magazine, newspaper or social media headline involving minerals or trace elements, such as "[can] dietary iron cause heart attacks?", does "cooking with aluminum foil cause cancer or Alzheimer's Disease?", does "low calcium intake cause weight-gain?", or can "adequate selenium intake slow the aging process?" and similar. Just tell us 'where you found the news', and what real science (published in peer-reviewed journals) has to say about it ;-) Also, please share with us how this research project will change or has affirmed your lifestyle and future choice of food and water? Is there anything you would suggest to alleviate the issue locally and globally? Please find a controversial magazine, newspaper or social media headline involving minerals or trace elements, such as "[can] dietary iron cause heart attacks?", does "cooking with aluminum foil cause cancer or Alzheimer's Disease?", does "low calcium intake cause weight-gain?", or can "adequate selenium intake slow the aging process?" and similar. Just tell us 'where you found the news', and what real science (published in peer-reviewed journals) has to say about it ;-) Also, please share with us how this research project will change or has affirmed your lifestyle and future choice of food and water? Is there anything you would suggest to alleviate the issue locally and globally?Explanation / Answer
The headline is "Is there too much aluminium in tea. "
I found it on google.
According to the journal Natural Resources, If pH soil values are low, aluminum tends to form chemical species that are potentially absorbed by plants, especially tea, and become toxic for living organisms. And according to Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease concerning human health recent studies have demonstrated that bio available aluminum is related to some diseases such as Alzheimer, Parkinson, and dialysis encephalopathy
After reading this article I found out that aluminium was toxic to my brain. I was drinking 5 to 7 cups of tea in winter, but after reading this i stopped driking tea.
I would suggest that there are other many sources of by which our body intakes the aluminium such as the deodrant sprays. The deodrants have high alluminiun content which is required to keep the sweat away. This alluminium is absorbed in our skin by the sensitive tissue. So instead of giving up tea i would suggest to reduce the consumption of other alluminium sources