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  2. New study reveals surprising health benefits and negatives of ...

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    New research on the potential health benefits of fizzy water has revealed some surprising positives - but also some negatives. The study suggests sparkling water could help people lose weight by ...

  3. Is Sparkling Water Good or Bad for You? We Finally Have ... - AOL

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    Carbonated water can be beneficial when it’s consumed as an alternative to sweetened carbonated beverages and energy drinks,” says Nichole Dandrea-Russert, M.S., R.D., author and plant ...

  4. Is sparkling water just as hydrating as still? Dietitians ...

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    Drinking enough water every day is crucial to maintain overall health. It also helps prevent dehydration, which can cause constipation, kidney stones, overheating, mood changes and unclear ...

  5. Carbonated water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbonated_water

    Carbonated water is a diluent mixed with alcoholic beverages where it is used to top-off the drink and provides a degree of 'fizz'. Adding soda water to "short" drinks such as spirits dilutes them and makes them "long" (not to be confused with long drinks such as those made with vermouth ).

  6. Plant–animal interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant–animal_interaction

    The earliest vascular plants initially formed on the planet about 425 million years ago, in the Devonian period of the early Paleozoic era. About every feeding method an animal might employ to consume plants had already been well-developed by the time the first herbivorous insects started consuming ferns during the Carboniferous epoch. [5]

  7. Caffeine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caffeine

    People may drink beverages containing caffeine to relieve or prevent drowsiness and to improve cognitive performance. To make these drinks, caffeine is extracted by steeping the plant product in water, a process called infusion. Caffeine-containing drinks, such as coffee, tea, and cola, are consumed globally in

  8. 15 Foods Doctors Want You to Stop Eating for a Healthier Diet

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    “Added sugars in foods and drinks can make it hard for people to get the nutrients they need without getting too many calories,” according to Healthy People 2030 (from the Office of Disease ...

  9. Benzene in soft drinks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzene_in_soft_drinks

    Benzene in soft drinks has to be seen in the context of other environmental exposure. Taking the worst example found to date of a soft drink containing 87.9 ppb benzene, [5] someone drinking a 350 ml (12 oz) can would ingest 31 μg (micrograms) of benzene, almost equivalent to the benzene inhaled by a motorist refilling a fuel tank for three ...