If we MUST eat a entire bag of Oreos.

Which scenario is better?

  • Eat the entire bag in 30 minutes
  • Eat the bag slowly, and evenly throughout a day?

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Ehhh, I’d say that, on average and for most purposes, spread out is better.

    Less of a hit to your system. No big blood sugar spikes, which reduces the worst aspects if swallowing an entire package to the minimum it gets.

    That being said, expect digestive issues to linger. You’ve got a lot of fats, the coloring, and the sugars playing havoc with your guts.

    Expect to need a lot of tooth brushing unless you just enjoy having plaque and acid build-up messing with your teeth.

    But I’d say that the risks of big spikes in blood sugar are higher than those risks. It could, in the right circumstances, kill you. And the way some of the more recent information regarding the role of sugar in atherosclerosis, and maybe other cardiovascular illness, is looking, every big spike is whittling time off of your heart more than a bunch of little ones will.

    • Timecircleline@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      One of the first things I did when I first moved out from my parents is eat a whole bag of Oreos for breakfast because I could.

      It turns your poop black.

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        22 hours ago

        Yup :)

        I’ve had to clean up oreo poop lol.

        A lot of older patients tend to get a “sweet tooth”, and they’ll go nuts on cookies and cakes.

        Oreo poops aren’t the worst poops, but they look bad and are super sticky.

        • jet@hackertalks.comOP
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          21 hours ago

          Oreo poops aren’t the worst poops, but they look bad and are super sticky.

          What are the worst poops? Curry night?

          • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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            10 hours ago

            Well, understand this is subjective.

            But, diabetic poop is probably the poop that is worst to clean up, depending on how well controlled their disease is. When it isn’t, the smell is like rotten fruit mixed with sewage. It’s also usually both runny and sticky when that happens, so it’s a bitch to get off of skin, and it gets into every nook and cranny.

            You definitely run into infections that are going to have people spraying poo everywhere, and most of the pathogens that do it make the smell rough too. However, it tends to be so watery that it cleans up easy. C diff, for example, you might need a face shield, but it wipes up easy.

    • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      for most purposes, spread out is better. Less of a hit to your system

      The digestive system is not built for boredom.

      It works best with lots of changes and irregularities. Single events of such stress are no problem at all (only many repeated events of the same stress are bad). The same goes for a day or two of staying hungry.

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        22 hours ago

        Yeah, but it’s also not meant to process a giant package of processed fats, levels of sugar we haven’t had time to adapt to, or the colorant used that is known to irritate the bowel.

        Which is why folks that go on a cookie spree like that end up constipated or loose and crampy. Which, yeah there’s some folks that would be able to take a giant hit of junk like that without noticing it, but I’ve had to clean up the mess left by Oreos when patients would go crazy on them for one reason or another (often dementia, sadly).

        No, it isn’t going to kill you, or send you to the hospital purely by the digestive side of things, but it can fuck up your day lol.

        Also, you’re misrepresenting not only what I said, but what the digestive tract is “built” for. It doesn’t actually benefit from irregularity of diet. It can handle it, but eating a fairly stable, non irritating diet keeps both the gut flora and the associated hormonal products produced in the intestines at a reliable operation. The more you disturb the system, the less stable the system. When it comes to gut flora and serotonin production in the gut, high sugar intake disrupts in a way that can have lingering effects; anything from a day to a week.

        Don’t mistake the difference between a varied healthy diet and shoving irritants down the pipes. They aren’t the same thing.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      I was thinking the opposite. The first one s a huge sugar hit, and every following one.

      • If you spread it out, your body efficiently digests them to maximize the sugar spikes, to maximize the calories absorbed to turn into fat
      • if you do them all in one sitting, you only get one sugar spike and much of the fat and sugar won’t even be digested
      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        Nah, when you’re dealing with carbs as simple as sugars, they’re broken down and absorbed very efficiently. Some of it even gets absorbed in the mouth before you swallow. So the spikes from stuff that is that sugar packed it can bump up blood sugar levels high enough to throw your whole system out of whack.

        Basically, it triggers a massive insulin dump into the blood stream, with all that entails.

        And, since the body can’t use that much at once, it’s more likely to get converted to fat than smaller bumps.

        Fats, compared to sugars, take longer to get broken down and absorbed. That process starts with saliva in the mouth, but doesn’t really get going until later. Iirc, you typically won’t be taking in any of the fats until it hits the small intestine.