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There's also an obesity test based on the
colour of your urine stream. If you can't
see what colour it is, you're obese. |
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My obese what? Stop leaving me in suspense with your sentence fragments! |
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See link for an interesting colour chart that shows how different colours are perceived by colour-blind people. Useful for graphic designers, map-makers, and the like. And as a deuteranomalous (red-green colour-blind) person, I found it interesting to try it in reverse to see what you normal folk are seeing. |
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Nothing new here, my urine has always been portable. |
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Thoroughly Baked. However, it goes by the name "colorimeter", if made in China for sale in the US; or "colourimeter" if made in the US for sale in the UK. (Make sure you're looking at the Beer - Lambert - Bouguer [haven't I seen him befoure?] absorption colo(u)rimeter, not the emission version with a suction cup on the front for measuring the color of your monitor.) They come as portable, and as precise, as you want to pay for. |
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In fact, in 1979, Brink & Slegers studied glomerular filtration rates (that's kidney function) in rat kidneys, using vitamin B12 as a marker, measured with a fiberoptic colorimeter. They showed results identical to the previous standard, vitamin B12 spectrophotometry. |
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It was a good idea then; you just aren't up on reading research abstracts from the University of Nijmegen. No fishbone for you. |
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//sentence fragments// Ooops. Fixed -
thanks. |
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So [imaginality] try eating a meal of beetroot and then tell us what colour it turns your urine....go on, it'll be fun... |
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Sure thing - any excuse to eat some beetroot. Yum. |
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[normzone] I hope that wasn't sp: potable. |
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