Originally posted by: Tyler
Originally posted by: Eli
Originally posted by: Tyler
Originally posted by: glen
You guys are forgetting the metals.
It is a serious concern that makes sushi less than the perfect food.
It may only affect folks like me who eat it 100 times or more per year.
1/3,000,000th of your tuna fish is mercury. I wouldn't worry too much.
The problem is that mercury builds up, and it's very toxic.
It will be something to worry about in 45 years after you've eaten 500lbs of sushi.....
People have been WAY overreacting to Mercury lately. Schools have been closed while special teams come to clean up a couple ounces of the stuff that they found kids were playing with. Of course, my parents and all thier frinds, and pretty much everyone I know around 50 years old played with the stuff as a kid, and they're fine.
A couple of ounces?! And you're saying that's nothing to worry about?! :Q
Mercury has a very high vapor pressure.. at room temperature it is volatile and giving off vapors that are very harmful.
Would you say the same thing about arsenic, or something equally dangerous?
I realize that many people played around with mercury before it was realized how bad it was for you..
People also painted clocks with glow in the dark radioactive material. They painted their skin, their fingernails...
They aren't doing so good anymore.
Exposure to high levels of elemental mercury vapor can result in nervous system damage including tremors, and mood and personality alterations. Exposure to relatively high levels of inorganic mercury salts can cause kidney damage. Adult exposure to relatively high levels of methylmercury through fish consumption can result in numbness or tingling in the extremities, sensory losses and loss of coordination. Exposure of the developing fetus through maternal intake of contaminated fish can result in neurologic developmental abnormalities in cognitive and motor functions. Whether any of these symptoms actually occur, and the nature and severity of the symptoms, depend on the amount of exposure.
It is nothing to play around with.
That said, I don't think you should stop eating Sushi just because of this fact. It's just something to be aware of.