• kabi@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Snopes: Luckily for those fond of their Granny Smiths, the body can detoxify cyanide in small doses, and the number of apple seeds it takes to pack a lethal punch is therefore so huge that even the most dedicated of apple eaters is extremely unlikely to ingest enough pips to cause any harm. Yet those who have heard apple seeds house a poison (usually remembered as arsenic, a quite different though equally deadly compound) cling to the frightening belief swallowing a small number of pips spells instant death.

      I can’t find an estimate right now, but you would have to eat at least a big handful of seeds, while making sure you grind them up in your mouth. It’s not wise to worry about this.

        • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          . For children especially, with the wrong apple variety, there is indeed a risk.

          And yet there’s no documented cases of it happening…. Why…?

          You people are being alarmists over something your body can naturally remove. It’s a non-issue, There’s a reason why you can’t find a source to corroborate anything you’ve stated here.

          Unless you want to eat them like peanuts and masticate them beyond all recognition, no one is at risk dude.

        • don@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Even with varieties containing the highest amount, kids would still need to be eating nearly 20 or so cores, so the likelihood of poisoning is only a concern for those who might eat that much all at once.

          The likelihood for the average person is being extremely low, since extremely few people will eat that much all at once.