Diet Coke Linked to Cancer, “SIDS”
Disease, Nutrition April 1st. 2008, 7:27pm
An important study was released in Nature today that described alarming findings concerning Diet Coke. Researchers discovered that drinking as little as 9 cans of Diet Coke each day can induce hyper-metastatic hyperplasia of the lateral incisors: tooth cancer. Even more disturbing than the fact that this common American beverage causes cancer is the speed of its onset. Certain subjects in their phase IV, double-blind, covariate-adapted, randomized, placebo-controlled trial reported symptoms within seconds of consumption, and many subjects regrettably succumbed to the disease after only a few hours.
The sweetener aspartame is the suspected cause of the tooth cancer, although researchers are continuing to investigate the dubious additive dihydrogen oxide as a possible agent. This rigorous, NIH study found conclusive evidence that aspartame causes cancer in rats. Although the source is yet to be verified in a phase V randomized, controlled trial, scientists have preemptively decided to name the Diet Coke illness “Sweetener-Induced Dental Syndrome,” or “SIDS” for short (although the Samui International Diving School contests their use of the acronym).
The following video shows one man, Rick Astley, shortly before his untimely demise. Mr. Astley had imbibed only 10 cans of Diet Coke in one hour, but he quickly became symptomatic for SIDS. His convulsions in the video demonstrate the relentless cruelty of the disease. The song is a requiem for his ambivalent love of Diet Coke. “Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down…” were Mr. Astley’s dying words.
Well I think that will suffice for this April Fool’s Day. See, isn’t medicine fun?!

April 1st, 2008 at 11:16 pm
I never thought I would live to see the day that the Natural Condition Rick Rolled me. Well played.
April 2nd, 2008 at 11:17 am
Unfortunately, this private study is not an April food joke.
http://myaspartameexperiment.com
April 2nd, 2008 at 12:38 pm
Bryanth:
You are correct, the myaspartameexperiment.com thing is not a joke, at least not to the author. However, there are appropriate avenues for scientific research, and feeding a bunch of rats in your basement some sweetener is not one of them. In fact, the ‘experiment’ is almost unethical; every institution that does animal testing is required to have a review board to oversee ethical concerns. The site is utterly sensational, confusing (mixes pictures of rats from different experiments), and has neither the structure nor the rigor of a real investigation. Most importantly, the author overuses italics for emphasis, which immediately discounts the validity of the work.
The site you reference, however, looks to offer a much more legitimate assessment of the dangers of aspartame, so thank you for the link.