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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Wed Sep 05, 2007 11:13 pm Post subject: Microwave Popcorn lovers beware....?? |
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What??
Popcorn lung patient inhaled fumes daily
By MARCUS KABEL, Associated Press Writer
Microwave popcorn fans worried about the potential for lung disease from butter flavoring fumes should know this: The sole reported case of the disease in a non-factory worker involves a man who popped the corn every day and inhaled from the bag.
Wayne Watson, 53, of Centennial, Colo., said he ate two or three bags of microwave popcorn every day for at least 10 years. In an interview with The Associated Press at his home late Wednesday, Watson said he is convinced his heavy consumption of popcorn caused his health problems.
Watson, who since February 2006 has been treated as an outpatient at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver, where his condition was diagnosed, pantomimed how he would open the bag at chest level, look down and breathe in the fumes.
Dr. Cecile Rose, a lung specialist at the hospital, said in an interview Wednesday that until Watson's condition was diagnosed, it had deteriorated, despite a CAT scan, steroid treatment and a biopsy.
Finally, Rose said, "I turned to the patient and said, 'This is a very weird question ... but have you been around a lot of popcorn?' And his jaw dropped and he said, 'How could you know that about me? Popcorn is my exclusive snack food preference. I am popcorn. I'm at least a two-pack a day user.'
"I was really surprised and relieved," Rose said.
There are no warnings from federal regulators, nor is there medical advice on how consumers should treat news of the rare, life-threatening disease, bronchiolitis obliterans, also known as popcorn lung.
The popcorn flavoring contains the chemical diacetyl, which has been linked to lung damage in workers inhaling its fumes in food manufacturing plants. The chemical is a naturally occurring compound that gives butter its flavor and is also found in cheese and even wine, according to the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health.
It's been approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a flavor ingredient, but hundreds of workers have sued flavoring makers in recent years for lung damage.
Dr. David Weissman, head of NIOSH's division of respiratory diseases, said the key difference between homes and the factories where popcorn lung has been found is in the level of exposure to diacetyl. For example, he said, sickened quality control workers at a Jasper, Mo., popcorn factory popped hundreds of bags a day in their testing, not just one or two.
The first apparent case of lung damage from a home popcorn maker came to light Tuesday in a recent letter to federal regulators from Rose.
In the interview, Rose said that no definite link has been established between Watson's heavy popcorn consumption and his lung disease, but that "the possibility raises public health concerns."
Doctors tested Watson's home for levels of diacetyl fumes and found that while popcorn was microwaved in the kitchen, peak levels of the fumes were similar to those measured in factories, she said.
While Rose said she still lets her kids microwave popcorn at home, she is concerned that the high levels of fumes measured at Watson's home could be present anytime consumers microwave popcorn, and that these high levels � and not just the cumulative effect of exposures in the factory � could be a factor in causing the disease.
"We don't know yet. We think it's a possibility," said Rose, who recommended the popcorn bags be tested further.
On Wednesday, the nation's largest microwave popcorn maker, ConAgra, said it would stop using diacetyl within a year out of concern for its workers � not because of risks to consumers. ConAgra makes Act II and Orville Redenbacher brands.
The Flavor and Extract Manufacturers Association said that Rose's finding does not suggest a risk from eating microwave popcorn.
Watson said that he quit eating microwave popcorn earlier this year but that he still craves it. His prognosis is good, he said; he no longer uses an inhaler or takes steroids.
And instead of popcorn, he now snacks on fruits and vegetables.
"America: Read the labels, and just be careful about what we put into our bodies and always practice moderation," Watson advised. "Don't go crazy."
http://tinyurl.com/2eovat |
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Gatsby
Joined: 09 Feb 2007
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 12:43 am Post subject: |
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Very interesting.
Sort of.
I hope people know you are not supposed to inhale popcorn.
Jokes aside, the artificial butter flavor can cause lung damage in sufficient quantities or over time. The damage experienced by the workers making the flavoring was permanent; people in that situation have to live with bottles of oxygen.
It is called COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The damage, from a variety of sources, to the lungs is cumulative and irreversible. Get enough of it, and you too could be one of those old folks tethered to oxygen bottles for the rest of your life.
I'm wondering whether that cheap artificial butter flavor is in other stuff. I remember you could buy bottles of butter flavoring in supermarkets back home.
I bought a rectangular tub of margarine here that was horrible. It was hard as a rock and didn't taste like margarine back home; it tasted like popcorn butter flavoring, and lots of it. Melted, it wasn't quite so repulsive, but left a disgusting aftertaste. So I'm wondering if it is the same chemical, and whether cooking with it might be a bad idea.
I'm sticking with real butter from now on. |
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tigerbluekitty
Joined: 19 Apr 2007
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 1:11 am Post subject: |
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Gatsby wrote: |
I bought a rectangular tub of margarine here that was horrible. It was hard as a rock and didn't taste like margarine back home; it tasted like popcorn butter flavoring, and lots of it. Melted, it wasn't quite so repulsive, but left a disgusting aftertaste. So I'm wondering if it is the same chemical, and whether cooking with it might be a bad idea. |
Bought the most awful margarine here too. It was like plastic wax and was difficult to melt! |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 6:10 am Post subject: |
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Quote: |
The popcorn flavoring |
Please refrain from scare mongering. It is not POPCORN that is the problem. POPCORN is god's food. It's the flavoring that is made in non-god country places like New York or California that is the problem.
Please cease and desist in this unwarranted attack on Corn Country.
Keep this in mind: A ton of popcorn, dropped on your head, still weighs a ton. That is more than enough to do the job. You have been warned. |
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Gatsby
Joined: 09 Feb 2007
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 6:21 am Post subject: |
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Ya-ta Boy yapped:
Quote: |
Quote:
The popcorn flavoring
Please refrain from scare mongering. It is not POPCORN that is the problem. POPCORN is god's food. It's the flavoring that is made in non-god country places like New York or California that is the problem.
Please cease and desist in this unwarranted attack on Corn Country.
Keep this in mind: A ton of popcorn, dropped on your head, still weighs a ton. That is more than enough to do the job. You have been warned. |
Well, yes, the artificial flavoring, and maybe the hydrogenated fat, too?
But air popped is fine, even with salt and melted butter. Any air poppers in Korea?
Oh, and they grow corn in New York, too! Lots and lots of it. They also make some darned fine CHEDDAR cheese (remember cheddar?). And butter. And ice cream. And pumpkins. And grapes, excellent grapes. And wine. Say, how come they don't have catawba wine in Korea? It would be a natural! So how can you say a place like that is ungodly???? |
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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 6:22 am Post subject: |
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Ya-ta Boy wrote: |
Quote: |
The popcorn flavoring |
Please refrain from scare mongering. It is not POPCORN that is the problem. POPCORN is god's food. It's the flavoring that is made in non-god country places like New York or California that is the problem.
Please cease and desist in this unwarranted attack on Corn Country.
Keep this in mind: A ton of popcorn, dropped on your head, still weighs a ton. That is more than enough to do the job. You have been warned. |
Um...what? It's the flavoring on the popcorn, so the problem is the popcorn...specifically microwave popcorn . |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 6:55 am Post subject: |
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Quote: |
Lots and lots of it. They also make some darned fine CHEDDAR cheese (remember cheddar?). And butter. And ice cream. And pumpkins. And grapes, excellent grapes. And wine. |
Oh, wah, wah, wah.
2004 Corn Production New York: 61,000,000 bushels
Illinois: 1,812,200,000 "
Iowa: 1,868,300,000 "
Hmmm...New York, just another wannabe.
PS: Just WHERE is the world's biggest butter cow displayed every year? |
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idonojacs
Joined: 07 Jun 2007
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Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 12:06 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: |
2004 Corn Production New York: 61,000,000 bushels
Illinois: 1,812,200,000 "
Iowa: 1,868,300,000 " |
61 million bushels of corn, and your sneering at that?
That's more than four bushels of corn per person in the state. We eat our corn, often with melted butter on it.
What do you do with your corn? |
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justagirl

Joined: 17 Jan 2003 Location: Cheonan/Portland
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Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2007 9:35 am Post subject: |
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PS: Just WHERE is the world's biggest butter cow displayed every year? |
....that was easy--the Iowa State Fair...hmm, do you think it has anything to do with corn, or popcorn? Melt that sucker down to top off all that popcorn!
Seriously, it's pretty cool to watch the butter cow being carved. One year I went and the entire "Last Supper" was carved, life-sized! |
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Kimchi Cowboy

Joined: 17 Sep 2006
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Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2007 6:16 pm Post subject: |
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justagirl wrote: |
Seriously, it's pretty cool to watch the butter cow being carved... |
For a minute there I misunderstood, and thought you were referring to the act of carving up of a side of beef, which took me back to the old days of chef's school.... Ah, there's no better way to spend a morning than with a sharp carving knife, up to your elbows in meat, gristle, and bone... little more than a bloodied apron between you and the slab of formerly-living beast before you... tossing the odd chunk of fat into the wall-mounted bug zapper... then it's off to the vacuum sealer!
Good times, good times. |
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