Message from @Dimorac
Discord ID: 538784907455889429
not something your body can process
you sure?
It’s not really drinkable
i think so
it is just sorta bad
it's got deuterium and oxygen instead of hydrogen right?
Just go to the shop, pick up the biggest bottle of water and see if its heavy
Done
Is heavy water the kind that you can breathe if you get accustomed to it?
D20
yeah ok
doesnt sound good for you
Ok, I Drank 1 liter of heavy water once. Followed by daily intake of 200 ml of heavy water.
The reason why I did this was for an medical experiment I was participating. They used this to track the turnover of T1 helper cells (involved in immune response). The idea that new T1 cells would incorporate some of the deuterium in their DNA.
What happened was that I got massive vertigo and got sick (threw up). The reason of this was the change of weight in the fluids in the balance organ. At least that's what they told me. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equilibrioception
After a couple of hours everything was ok again and I even went skiing that evening.
The following intakes had no effect.
I do remember that I did not like the taste of it. It was different from normal tap water and I got to dislike the taste as I associated it with the vertigo. I believe kinda metallic bitter (this was over 12 years ago, and the details are a bit fuzzy.)
Heavy water isn’t drinkable
thats from reddit
that's what I was thinking
Because yeah it fucks with your bodily functions
mhm
how about super heavy water
it wont hurt you
a lot of that shit is affected by the amound of hydrogen in stuff
Atomikov fuck off
so your bodily processes is gonna be a bad time
No that actually exists Data
no wonder the body rejected it
Tritium instead of deuterium
it's radioactive tho
pfft oh well
it's usually called tritiated water
Okay the comments are shitty
Just waste
well of course it's reddit
what were you expecting
Reddits comments are always shitty
No matter what thread
well I liked motherhorseeyes
beyond that tho
garbage
Isn't heavy water primarily used for nuclear purposes?