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-Aspartame: The Real Story JoAnn Guest Mar 13, 2005 20:02 PST

 

by Annemarie Colbin, C.H.E.S.

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http://www.foodandhealing.com/article-aspartame.htm

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Sugar is bad for you, right? It has calories and makes you fat.

Therefore, anything that tastes sweet and doesn't have calories is

preferable, because it won't make you fat. Right?

 

That is the thinking that supports the widespread use of artificial

sweeteners.

 

Millions of people guzzle soft drinks sweetened with aspartame, the

compound sold under the trade names Nutrasweet and Equal. This

ingredient is found in all kinds of diet foods, in toothpaste, and

sprinkled out of small packets into coffee and tea. It is sold

worldwide.

 

It is also associated with thousands of reports of adverse effects. Most

of the information that follows was taken from the Aspartame Consumer

Safety Network Fact Sheet, written by Lendon Smith, MD, former Network

Physician at NBC-TV and well-known author and pediatrician.

 

Aspartame (the technical name is L-aspartyl-L-phenylalanyl-methyl-ester)

is considered to be about 200 times sweeter than sugar. It is virtually

calorie free.

 

When ingested and metabolized, it breaks down into three substances:

 

phenylalanine (50%), one of the amino acids needed for the production of

neurotransmitters essential to brain function. While this sounds OK, it

is not: people with PKU (phenylketonuria) are missing the enzymes to

break down this amino acid and may end up with an excess that causes

brain damage.

 

For susceptible people, phenylalanine will be neurotoxic and might

cause seizures.

aspartic acid (40%), which can cause brain damage in fetuses

methanol (10%), an alcohol with turns into formaldehyde, a known toxic

substance used, among other things, as embalming fluid.

 

Early studies in the 1970's found that aspartic acid causes holes in the

brains of mice. (I find this an interesting bit of information, in the

light of current concerns with " spongiform encephalopathy, " or mad cow

disease, and Creuzfeld-Jacob disease, in all of which the brain becomes

sponge-like with holes in it).

 

Monkeys fed aspartame died or had grand mal seizures; however, these

studies were not submitted to the FDA when approval for aspartame was

requested. The request was approved by then FDA commissioner Arthur Hull

Hayes, Jr., in 1981, after he overruled the Public Board of Inquiry's

recommendation to ban this artificial sweetener.

 

Two months before quitting the post, Hayes approved the use of

aspartame in soft drinks, even though the National Soft Drink

Association had warned the FDA that aspartame was breaking down in warm

climates.

 

From the early ‘80's, consumer complaints began pouring into the FDA

related to aspartame use. Among the symptoms reported are the following:

 

 

headaches

nausea

vertigo

hearing loss

tinnitus

insomnia

numbness and tingling of extremities

blurred vision

blindness

eye problems

memory loss

slurred speech

mild to suicidal depression

personality changes

violent episodes

mood changes

anxiety attacks

hyperactivity

heart arrhythmia

edema or swelling

gastrointestinal disorders

seizures

skin lesions

muscle cramps

joint pains

fatigue

PMS

menstrual irregularities

chest pain

increased appetite

 

Artificial sweeteners can increase appetite because as the sweet taste

hits the mouth, a message is passed on to the body that carbohydrates

are coming in; then the pancreas swings into action and sends insulin

into the bloodstream. As there are no actual carbohydrates, the insulin

lowers the blood sugar and appetite increases. In this manner,

artificial sweeteners can contribute to hypoglycemia.

 

Scientific studies show mixed results; some find no increase effects on

hyperactivity with aspartame, others find that individuals with mood

disorders do react with headaches or increased number and severity of

depressive symptoms.

 

" Anecdotal reports " are simply people telling what happened to them;

while the scientific community does not accept these as valid, sensible

human beings might at least pay attention. Where there's smoke there's

fire.

 

In addition to the above symptoms, aspartame use can mimic a number of

autoimmune diseases. Betty Martini, founder of Mission Possible, an

organization dedicated to spread information about problems with

aspartame, found that methanol toxicity causes metabolic acidosis and

mimics multiple sclerosis (MS).

 

She lists the following symptoms as " aspartame disease " : fibromyalgia,

spasms, shooting pains, joint pains, depression, anxiety attacks,

slurred speech, blurred vision, and memory loss. In addition to MS,

aspartame may also either mimic or trigger the following illnesses:

 

fibromyalgia

chronic fatigue syndrome

Epstein-Barr

post-polio syndrome

lyme disease

epilepsy

hypothyroidism

ADD

Meuniere disease

Alzheimer disease

 

Fortunately, most of these symptoms are reversible, and disappear once

aspartame is discontinued.

 

This noxious substance, so ubiquitous in our commercial food supply,

should be recalled by the FDA and retested as a drug. As it is not

classified as a drug, the manufacturers are not obligated to monitor its

adverse effects!

 

Senator Howard Metzenbaum had written a bill warning pregnant women,

infants and children against ingesting aspartame, on the suspicion of

its relationship to seizures, changes in brain chemistry, and adverse

neurological and behavioral symptoms; as is to be expected, the bill got

killed.

 

What I found really interesting is that the US Air Force has formally

warned all pilots to refrain from consuming aspartame-sweetened diet

drinks, as they found them linked to grand mal seizures, vertigo, heart

disease, and suicidal depressions.

 

Aspartame interferes with the production of the calming neurotransmitter

serotonin. Isn't it really interesting that sales of the antidepressant

Prozac, which encourages the production of serotonin, have gone through

the roof in the last few years?

 

For further information, you can contact the following two

organizations:

 

Aspartame Consumer Safety Network; Mary Nash Stoddard, Founder. P.O. Box

780634 - Dallas, TX 75378; tel. 214-352-4268. E-mail: marys-

Stoddard's book The Deadly Deception can be ordered by calling

1-800-969-6050.

Mission Possible International

9270 River Club Parkway

Duluth, Ga. 30097

770 242-2599 Voice

770 242-2596 FAX

 

Betty Martini, Founder. E-mail: bett-

forum: aspartame/

 

To sweeten your food without white sugar and without artificial

sweeteners, stick to the real thing: fruit both fresh and dry, juices,

maple syrup, grain malts. Yes, they do have calories like normal food

does, but they will not fool and confuse your body, and won't put you at

risk for autoimmune or neurological disorders.

 

If you really like drinking sweet fizzy drinks, here is a simple recipe:

 

 

Apple Mint Fizz

1/3 cup unfiltered apple juice

1/3 cup cold mint tea

1/3 cup seltzer water

 

Mix and enjoy at room temperature or over ice,

with a slice of lemon if you like. You can make all kinds

of variations on this recipe with juices, teas, and seltzer water.

 

1998-2004 Annemarie Colbin, Ph.D.

_________________

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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