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This incident happened recently in north texas. A woman went boating one Sunday taking her some cans of Coke which she put into the refrigerator of the boat. On monday she was taken to the hospital and placed in the Intensive Care Unit. She died of Leptospirosis. This was traced to the can of Coke she drank from, not using a glass. Tests showed that the can was infected by dried rat uring and hence the disease Leptospirosis. Rat urine contains toxic and deathly substances. It is highly recommended to thoroughly wash the upperpart of ALL soda cans before drinking out of them. The cans are typically stored in warehouses and transported straight to the shops without being cleaned. A study at NYCU showed that the tops of ALL soda cans are more contaminated than the public toilets, full of germs and bacteria. So wash them with water before putting them in your mouth to avoid any fatal accident. Please forward to all people u care for?
Posted By: anita moore
Wednesday, September 22nd 2010 at 7:34PM
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Wow. I'm really sorry to hear this news of what happened to the lady. I'm going to really do better about washing the soda cans more thoroughly before drinking from them.
Wednesday, September 22nd 2010 at 9:14PM
Jen Fad
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I hear you sis Jen. Glad I don't drink can sodas most of the time anyways, but this could probably apply to any canned good, vegetables, fruit etc. I'm not sure Saint if it was national but I got the story from my cousin in NY who shared it on facebook and it happened in texas. I didn't hear about it here in Georgia, so it was some places and not other. NY carries a bigger demographics of news topics I guess. The report didn't say there were any other deaths and my cousin keeps me up on these kinds of topics daily.
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 11:44AM
anita moore
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I remember an incident last year in Florida where a married couple found a dead frog inside a Diet Pepsi can brought from a Sam's Club store...stories like this make me almost not want to drink colas again...Here's the story by the way... STRANGE NEWS: COUPLE FINDS DEAD FROG INSIDE PEPSI CAN The "disgusting" blob in Fred DeNegri's Diet Pepsi can was probably a frog or toad, the Food and Drug Administration said. DeNegri was grilling in his backyard tiki bar in Ormond Beach, Florida, when he popped open a can of Diet Pepsi, took a big gulp and started gagging, his wife, Amy, said. He emptied out the can down a sink but something heavy remained inside. He shook the can until something resembling "pink linguini" slid out, followed by "dark stuff," Amy DeNegri said. But the heavy object inside the can never came out, she said. "It was disgusting," said Amy DeNegri, 54. "And now, what started out as a normal afternoon in our tiki bar has blown up into this crazy thing." The DeNegris took pictures before calling poison control and the FDA, which showed up the next day to examine the can in question and collect it for lab testing. The couple received a copy of the completed report last week from the Food and Drug Administration Office of Regulatory Affairs, which concluded the foreign matter appeared to be a frog or a toad. VideoWatch CNN's Nicole Lapin discuss the results » "The animal was lacking internal organs normally found in the abdominal and thoracic cavity," the report notes. A second, closed can from the same 36-pack of Diet Pepsi from Sam's Club, was also submitted for testing, according to Amy DeNegri. No abnormalities were detected, the report states. The FDA also conducted an investigation at the local Pepsi bottling plant in Orlando from August 4 to 11 and "did not find any adverse conditions or association to this problem," spokeswoman Siobhan DeLancey said. "We have not determined when or how the contamination occurred," DeLancey said in an e-mail. Pepsi says the FDA results "affirmed" the company's confidence "in the quality of our products and the integrity of our manufacturing system," according to spokesman Jeff Dahncke. "The speed of our production lines and the rigor of our quality control systems make it virtually impossible for this type of thing to happen in a production environment. In fact, there never has been even a single instance when a claim of this nature has been traced back to a manufacturing issue," Dahncke said in an e-mail. "The FDA conducted a thorough inspection of our Orlando facility and found no cause for concern. In this case, the FDA simply was unable to determine when or how the specimen entered the package." When asked if Pepsi believed it was not responsible for the animal getting into the can, Dahncke said, "We have addressed the facts of the investigation and stated our position. It's not appropriate for us to comment beyond that." But the DeNegris say they're hopping mad over Pepsi's handling of the matter. Amy DeNegri said she hasn't heard from Pepsi since the day after the incident occurred, when she spoke with someone over the phone. At first, the woman was apologetic, but DeNegri says her attitude changed after she told her that the FDA was coming to take the can for testing. "She asked for my pictures, I sent them and never heard back," she said. The retired school staffer says she and her husband are seeking legal advice to examine their options. "I want to see Pepsi fess up to it and compensate my husband for the negative publicity they have caused," she said. "I'm easy, but they're the ones that are making it hard."
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 1:14PM
Siebra Muhammad
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This is totally ridiculous. It is easy to see how an animal in factory that big could have gotten into one of the cans, and as easily to see how rodents could be living in the warehouses with canned goods, especially in NY. There isn't a warehouse on the water that doesn't have rodents. These companies better get it together and do something about these situations instead of passing the buck. Dang people are dying
Thursday, September 23rd 2010 at 1:55PM
anita moore
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