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Old 15-09-2014, 11:12   #7
ex nihilo
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jo nep View Post
I am unsure if eating excrement carries health risks whereas I am fairly certain that drinking urine is generally harmless and unless my memory is fading, there was a program on TV a while back about the benefits of taking the waters.

Pee drinking is certainly an aquired taste, one which my PD has ensured that I have acquired, now really appreciate and have had no adverse side effects whatsoever. On the contrary, I now find it a priviledge and a most subserviant act to accept a drink direct from source. Pee can have different flavours but generally Mistress consumes copious quantities of water during a watersports session to ensure the outpouring is not sharp tasting or to heavily coloured.

I have also found that chilled pee is very tasty and can be consumed like a good pint albeit without the head or at least a good glass of chilled wine. I believe urine is relatively sterile wheras pooh contains millions of very nasty bacteria.

No doubt a member of the mediacl profession will be able to enlighten us further about eating waste products..
Well, yes and no...

The contents of the large intestine contain anaerobic harmless bacteria as part of its normal flora, their role being the prevention of colonization of the gut with pathogenic bacteria and the production of Vitamin K. There is the possibility though, that unhealthy poo might contain strains of pathogenic bacteria which give rise to infection.

Healthy urine is non-toxic but it does contain products that the body’s cellular processes deem as waste or undesirable. It will also contain metabolites of drugs that have been administered, whether medical or non-medical and some metabolites may have more pharmacological activity than the parent molecule. That’s why toxicology studies on ED drugs (such as Viagra) taken by one sex only are performed on both sexes. The drug and its metabolites can end up in pharmacokinetic compartments of both sexes, if a condom is not used.

It’s a similar story with the human papillo virus, which can be sexually transmitted. There are many HPV strains, most of which do not cause any harm. However, across the wider spectrum there are some serious strains linked to the development of head and neck cancers.
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