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MSG Dangers and Deceptions

by Jack L Samuels

http://www.price-pottenger.org/Articles/MSG.html

 

 

March 30, 1998 was a sad day for consumers concerned with

the safety of processed food.

 

On that date, Federal Magistrate Judge Thomas C. Mummert,

III, ruled against the Truth in Labeling Campaign (TLC) and 30 other plaintiffs

who sued the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in an effort to have all free

glutamic acid

(MSG) disclosed on the labels of all processed food.

 

On December 13, 1994, a legal document referred to as a

Citizen Petition was filed with the FDA requesting that the FDA initiate a

regulation that would cause all processed food to be measured post-production

for free glutamic acid, the processed food component that consumers refer to as

monosodium glutamate (MSG). The Citizen Petition further requested that if free

glutamic acid was found to be present in a product, that its presence be stated

on the label as " MSG, " in grams, with the amount present carried out

to the third decimal place.

Further, it was requested that an appropriate warning

regarding MSG be included on the labels of products in which it was found.

 

When the FDA failed to respond to the Citizen Petition

within the 180 days required under law, TLC, a nonprofit corporation concerned

with appropriate labeling of processed food, joined by the petitioners and

several additional individuals, filed suit against the FDA on August 29, 1995.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit included researchers, physicians, MSG-sensitive

consumers and parents of MSG-sensitive children. Some of the physicians

involved in the suit were MSG-sensitive, and most of the MSG-sensitive

individuals involved had been diagnosed as MSG-sensitive by a physician.

 

It should be noted that all participants in the Citizen

Petition readily agreed to be plaintiffs in the lawsuit except for one

physician. That MSG-sensitive physician, age 47, died prior to the initiation

of the lawsuit from the very condition that he attributed to his MSG

sensitivity.

 

The behavior of the FDA during the course of the lawsuit,

in the opinion of this writer, was not what one would expect from an agency

concerned about food safety. The agency attempted several times to have the

suit dismissed on a number of different bases; kept the court from seeing

important documents that we had requested, on the grounds that a federal agency

is protected from full disclosure under the Administrative Procedure Act; and

presented the court with what can be best described as deceptive and misleading

information.

 

The MSG Problem

 

MSG is a food additive that enhances flavours in

food. It virtually has no flavor of its own, but neurologically causes people

to experience a more intense flavor from the foods that they eat containing the

substance. To millions of consumers, it means experiencing an adverse effect

from the additive and possible adverse health effects in the future. To the

food industry, it means increased profits, a simple way to balance taste in a

product line and mask unwanted tastes, and to make otherwise unpalatable foods

acceptable. In particular, MSG helps replace flavor lost by elimination of fat

in many low-fat and no-fat foods.

 

The FDA requires that the ingredient " monosodium

glutamate " be listed on the labels of foods in which it is used.

Technically speaking, that ingredient is approximately 78% free glutamic acid,

approximately 21% sodium, and up to 1% contaminants. However, free glutamic

acid is also found, in varying amounts, in over 40 other labeled ingredients

whose names give no clue to the fact that free glutamic acid is present as a

component of the ingredients. (See Table 1) In some foods, glutamic acid is not

specifically added, but is formed during processing. That is why the TLC

lawsuit called for post-production testing and labeling of free glutamic acid.

 

Table 1: Hidden Sources of MSG

[ this does not transfer to email; go to the url above]

http://www.price-pottenger.org/Articles/MSG.html

 

These ingredients ALWAYS contain MSG:

 

These ingredients OFTEN contain MSG or create MSG during

processing:

 

Some unexpected sources of MSG:

 

The number of U.S. citizens affected by ingestion of MSG is

in the tens of millions. This figure is based on epidemiologic studies

completed in the 1970's that determined that at least 25% of the population

reacted to MSG at the levels that were then found in processed food.1,2 (The

amount of MSG currently found in processed food has increased dramatically over

the years.) To counter these findings, the glutamate industry funded their own

epidemiological study,3 a study since relied on by the FDA. In the

industry-funded study, 43% of the respondents reported adverse reactions

following a meal, reactions that we now associate with MSG sensitivity.

However, the author of the study narrowly defined MSG sensitivity as three

specific, mild and transitory conditions, all occurring at one time, within a

limited time following ingestion of MSG. Even so, the researchers found 1.8% of

the test population reacting to MSG. Since the time of that study, the FDA has

claimed that approximately 2.0% of the population react to MSG with mild and

transitory reactions.

 

Tracking MSG Dangers

 

The ingredient " monosodium glutamate " was

invented in Japan in 1908.4 The inventor, Kikunae Ikeda, identified the flavor

enhancing substance of seaweed, recognizing that Asians had used seaweed for

flavouring for thousands of years.

Shortly thereafter, he and a partner formed Ajinomoto,

currently a six billion dollar firm, that is the world's largest producer of

MSG. Use of the product was minimal in our country until after World War II,

when it was introduced to the United States food industry as a flavouring agent

that our military discovered made Japanese army rations more palatable than our

own. Many may remember when pure monosodium glutamate became available in our

stores in a product called " Accent. "

 

In 1968, a Chinese physician who immigrated to our

country, Dr. Robert Ho Man Kwok, wrote a letter to the editor of The New

England Journal of Medicine5 to ask for help in determining why he and friends

suffered numbness, weakness, and palpitations when they dined in certain

Chinese restaurants. He reported that the condition occurred 15 to 20 minutes

following the meal and lasted about two hours. The letter was published under

the heading " Chinese Restaurant Sy ndrome. " Published responses that

followed indicated that Dr. Kwok's problem was a reaction to monosodium

glutamate and -- as industry protested -- the debate over the safety of MSG

began.

 

About the same time, John W. Olney, M.D., a

neuroscientist at Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri who recently had

been appointed to the National Academy of Science, noted that mice being fed

MSG for a study of retinal deterioration had become grotesquely obese.6

Believing that the obesity was related to the function of the hypothalamus in

the brain, he sacrificed MSG-fed mice and found that MSG caused hypothalamus

lesions and neuroendocrine disorders, and that the very young were at

particular risk. Neuroscientists now generally agree that glutamic acid is

neurotoxic, killing brain neurons by exciting them to death.

 

Dr. Olney's findings did raise concern, especially since

he had pointed out that the very young were most susceptible to damage because

the protective blood brain barrier remains under development in the young.

Because of Dr. Olney's work, considerable pressure was put on the food industry

to remove MSG from baby food. In an apparent effort to diffuse the pressure,

they agreed. To this date, however, the FDA has taken no official action to

disallow MSG in baby food.

 

Although baby food sold today appears to be MSG-free,

there are junior food products with MSG, and, of course, infants eat table

food, much of which contains MSG. Also, baby formula contains ingredients with

MSG; formulas for allergic infants contain much larger amounts than regular

formula.

 

Industry Research

 

In 1969, just as the dangers of MSG were being

discovered, the glutamate industry formed a nonprofit organization, the

International Glutamate Technical Committee (IGTC), and in 1977 formed a

subsidiary, The Glutamate Association (TGA), to defend the safety of its product,

the ingredient " monosodium glutamate. "

 

To this day, IGTC serves as a research organization for

the MSG industry, interacting with scientists and others, and providing

research grants for studies on the subject of MSG. Until several years ago, TGA

served as the MSG industry's connection to consumers, acting somewhat like a

public relations firm.

Today, the International Food Information Council (IFIC)

most often acts for TGA, distributing questionable information on the subject

of MSG to the media and clogging the Internet with similar misleading

information. IFIC holds itself out as an independent organization concerned

with food related health issues.

In fact, IFIC is funded primarily, if not totally, by the

food industry whose products it claims to be safe.7 Through a foundation, IFIC

provides grants to agencies such as the American Dietetic Association and the

American College of Family Practice Foundation.

 

If one were to review the literature to determine if

controlled studies have ever been done on humans to prove or disprove that they

are sensitive to MSG, one would find that, with possible rare exception, all

such studies have been conducted under sponsorship of IGTC or one of their

agents or supporters. One would also find that both test and placebo materials

have typically been provided by IGTC. In one case, where the researcher used

soup in the study, the researchers obtained the soup from Ajinomoto in Japan

rather than rely on a source in this country.8 In these controlled studies,

some subjects always react to MSG, but large numbers of subjects also react to

a placebo. These studies conclude that since the subjects react to both MSG and

placebos, it " proves " that it is not the MSG that people are reacting

to. As faulty as this logic is, it is these studies that the FDA relies on in

concluding that MSG is safe.

 

Placebo Problems

 

For years, I could not figure out why large numbers of

subjects in MSG industry-sponsored studies were reacting to placebos which, by definition,

should be made up of inert, non-reactive material. Finally, in 1993, we found

the answer. The placebos contained aspartame! The proof was contained in a

letter signed by the chairman of the IGTC.9 It was found in a file of the FDA.

The use of aspartame dated back to 1978, three years before aspartame was

approved by the FDA for human consumption.

 

Aspartame is far from inert and non-reactive. It contains

approximately 40% aspartic acid, 50% phenylalanine, and 10% of a methyl ester.

Neuroscientists have determined from studies on experimental animals that both

aspartic acid and glutamic acid load on the same receptors in the brain, cause

identical brain lesions and neuroendocrine disorders and have an additive

affect. Indeed, MSG-sensitive people suffer similar adverse reactions from

aspartame, providing that they ingest amounts that exceed their tolerance

levels, and vice versa. At this writing, the FDA has on file approximately

7,000 unsolicited reports of adverse reactions to aspartame.

 

The proof of the inappropriate placebos was turned over

to the FDA. After several years of prodding, the FDA turned for vindication to

a special Expert Panel of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental

Biology (FASEB), then studying the safety of MSG in food for the FDA. Many

months later, FASEB, in a wishy-washy response, indicated that aspartame should

no longer be used as test material in studies on MSG sensitivity.10

 

Yes, IGTC did respond to the advice given by FASEB. They

changed the placebo materials that were to be used in studies that were under

development. The first study using new placebo material has now been published.

The new placebo material does not contain aspartame, but contains sucrose11, a

substance that will affect the findings of any study on MSG intolerance. If

sucrose is used in placebos, it will also be used in test material where it

will -- surprisingly

-- diminish the effect of MSG.12 IGTC knows this well

because they funded research that said so. The FDA also knows that sucrose and

other carbohydrates diminish the effect of MSG.

 

FDA Studies

 

In a July, 1995 FDA-funded report by FASEB entitled

" The Safety of MSG in Food, " FASEB was to have reviewed all of the

published studies and reports relating to MSG. Their eight member Expert Panel,

at least four of whom had conflicts of interest, did not do so. Instead, they

elected to prepare a 20 page Executive Summary for broad distribution that

consisted of answers to 18 specific questions posed by the FDA. These questions

created the impression that MSG causes only mild and transitory problems.

 

The FDA did not ask about, and FASEB did not even

address, the fact that MSG causes migraine headaches, the leading reaction to

MSG, and a reaction that is now well recognized by headache clinics throughout

the country. Also not properly addressed in the July, 1995 FASEB report are a

number of studies that have found that when MSG is administered to pregnant

rats or mice, or to very young rats or mice, the offspring or young rodents all

suffer from very specific and very definite learning disabilities.13 The report

also fails to mention that many studies point to grotesque obesity in animals

that were administered MSG when young,14 and that MSG has been implicated in

neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou

Gehrig's disease),15-17 certain psychiatric conditions,18 and heart

irregularities such as

tachycardia.19 (See Table 2 for a list of adverse

conditions reported by MSG-sensitive individuals).

 

Table 2: Collected Reports of Adverse Reactions to MSG

[the graph does not transfer to email; go to the url ]

 

Natural vs. Unnatural Glutamic Acid

 

In defense of their position that MSG is harmless, the

MSG industry, food

processors, and the FDA point to the fact that glutamic

acid, bound with other

amino acids as a component of protein, does not cause

reactions in humans; and

they go on to ask how that could be since the glutamic

acid freed from protein

during digestion is identical to the glutamic acid freed

from protein through

a manufacturing process, and used as a flavor enhancer.

In fact, they contend

that some unadulterated foods, such as tomatoes picked

from the vine, so to

speak, or mushrooms contain free glutamic acid, and would

cause adverse

reactions if an individual were truly sensitive to MSG.

 

We had the free glutamic acid in tomatoes measured. The

amount was minute --

11 pounds of tomatoes produced only one gram of free

glutamic acid. Yet, we

know that some individuals can react to minute amounts of

" manufactured " free

glutamic acid, but will not react to unadulterated foods

such as tomatoes or

mushrooms. We found out something else. There is a

difference between ingesting

foods in which glutamic acid is bound or ingesting the

minute amounts of

glutamic acid in unprocessed food and the free glutamic

acid that occurs in food as

a consequence of a manufacturing process.

 

The glutamic acid in non-manufactured proteins contains

only L-glutamic acid.

Only L-glutamic acid is produced in higher organisms.20

However, when

glutamic acid is freed from protein through a

manufacturing process, invariably

D-glutamic acid, its " mirror image "

(stereoisomer) is also produced, along with a

chemical called pyroglutamic acid.21 If an acid is used to

free the glutamic

acid from protein -- a common method used in our country,

but forbidden in some

European countries -- mono and dichloro propanols22 are

also produced; and,

based on a report of the FDA, if a process is used to

make what the flavouring

industry refers to as reaction or processed flavours from

certain proteins,

heterocyclic amines are produced. Mono and dichloro

propanols and heterocyclic

amines are known to be carcinogenic.

 

Dealing with MSG

 

We know that MSG-sensitivity is a sensitivity to a toxic

substance rather

than an allergy. MSG sensitivity is not IgE mediated;

there are no antibodies

developed in the body. Therefore, traditional allergy

tests do not detect

MSG-sensitivity and it does not appear possible to

desensitize an MSG-sensitive

individual to the substance.

 

We know that tolerance levels for MSG can vary from

milligrams on up, and

that it is easily possible to ingest as much as six grams

of MSG in a meal today.

Alcohol, stress and other factors can enhance MSG sensitivity.

Some people

experience their only reactions in Chinese restaurants

because Chinese

restaurants tend to use higher amounts of MSG than are

found in most other restaurants;

but the MSG problem is not restricted to dining in

Chinese restaurants. MSG

is now found in virtually all processed foods.

 

We know that MSG reactions occur in individuals at

varying times after

ingestion, from immediately following ingestion up to 48

hours following ingestion.

The reaction time following ingestion of MSG is almost

always the same each

time for an individual. Once this reaction time is

determined, an individual can

always look back after a reaction and identify the food

that has caused the

problem.

 

To test for MSG-sensitivity, go on a 2-3 week diet on which

you limit your

food intake to fresh cooked fruits and vegetables and

fresh, unadulterated fish,

meat, and poultry. During the diet use no sauces,

flavoring food solely with

fresh herbs. Eat nothing processed out of a box, bottle,

bag, jar, or can.

Eliminate bread, dairy products, " basted "

turkeys, or items from the deli

counter. Eliminate all aspartame and any product that

contains the words " hydrolyzed "

or " amino acids, " including shampoos and

supplements. If you feel better

after the diet, then begin to add back foods to determine

the items that may be

causing you problems. Listen to your body. It is a

marvellous laboratory.

 

Growing Concern

 

We know that scientists are increasingly concerned about

glutamic acid,

although most research is on the glutamic acid in the

body (endogenous glutamic

acid) rather than the MSG that we ingest (exogenous

glutamic acid).

Pharmaceutical companies are spending millions of dollars

on drugs to control the effect of

endogenous glutamic acid on certain disease and injury

processes. On May 3-5,

the National Institute of Health sponsored a seminar

entitled " The Glutamate

Cascade: Common Pathways of Central Nervous System

Disease States. "

 

In his testimony before FASEB on April 7, 1993,

neuroscientist Richard C.

Henneberry, Ph.D. summed up his presentation by saying:

" I consider it ironic

that the pharmaceutical industry is investing vast

resources in the development

of glutamate receptor blockers to protect CNS neurons

against glutamate

neurotoxicity in common neurological disorders, while at

the same time the food

industry, with the blessing of the FDA, continues to add

great quantities of

glutamate to the food supply. "

 

Although MSG-sensitive individuals must stay away from MSG,

I feel that MSG

is not good for anyone. A growing number of

neuroscientists believe that MSG

may be a " slow neurotoxin, " resulting in

neurodegenerative diseases such as

Alzheimer's and Parkinson's later in life.

 

There is no question in my mind that one day MSG will be

properly disclosed

on the labels of processed food, and that its use in

processed food will be

dramatically reduced. I assure you that I will continue

to work individually and

through TLC to see that all MSG in all processed food is

disclosed. You may

remain current with the MSG issue by visiting the TLC Web

site on the Internet

at: http://www.truthinlabeling.org/

Your help in the MSG labeling campaign

would be appreciated.

 

 

Note: Further information about the dangers of MSG is

contained in

Excitotoxins: The Taste that Kills by Russell Blaylock,

MD, available from PPNF.

Jack L. Samuels has worked in the health care field since

1957. In 1971, he

was diagnosed as being MSG sensitive. Even though he has

avoided all restaurant

meals and foods labeled as containing MSG, he has lost

consciousness about 25

times due to hidden MSG in food ingredients. He and his

wife Adrienne founded

the Truth in Labeling Campaign to encourage proper

labeling of MSG in our

foods.

 

References

1. Reif-Lehrer, L. A questionnaire study of the

prevalence of Chinese

restaurant syndrome. Fed Proc, 36:1617-1623, 1977.

2. Kenney, R. A. and Tidball, C. S. Human susceptibility

to oral monosodium

L-glutamate. Am J Clin Nutr, 25: 140-146, 1972.

3. Kerr, G. R., Wu-Lee, M., El-Lozy, M., McGandy, R., and

Stare, F. J.

Objectivity of food-symptomatology surveys. J Am Diet

Assoc, 71: 263-268, 1977.

4. Schwartz, G. R. In Bad Taste: The MSG Syndrome, Santa

Fe, NM, Health

Press, 1988.

5. Kwok, R. H. M. The Chinese restaurant syndrome. Letter

to the editor. N

Engl J Med, 278: 796, 1968.

6. Olney, J. W. Brain lesions, obesity, and other

disturbances in mice

treated with monosodium glutamate. Science, 164: 719-721,

1969.

7. Encyclopedia of Association, Detroit, MI, Gale

Research, 144, 1998.

8. Goldschmiedt, M., Redfern, J. S., and Feldman, M. Food

coloring and

monosodium glutamate: effects on the cephalic phase of

gastric acid secretion and

gastrin release in humans. Am J Clin Nutr, 51: 794-797,

1990.

9. Ebert, A. G. Letter to Sue Ann Anderson, R.D., Ph.D.,

Senior Staff

Scientist, Life Sciences Research Office, Fed. of

American Societies for Experimental

Biology, March 22, 1991. FDA Docket No. 90N-0379 (Item

CR2).

10. Analysis of Adverse Reactions to Monosodium Glutamate

(MSG), Life

Sciences Research Office, Fed. of Am. Soc. for

Experimental Biology. Prepared for Ctr

for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, FDA. 105, July,

1995.

11. Yang, W.H. The monosodium glutamate syndrome complex:

Assessment in a

double-blind placebo-controlled, randomized study, J

Allergy Clin Immunol,

757-762, June 1997.

12. Stegink, L. D., Filer, L. J.,Jr., Baker, G. L., and

Bell, E. F. Effect of

sucrose ingestion on plasma glutamate concentrations in

humans administered

monosodium L-glutamate. AJ Clin Nutr, 43:510-515, 1986

13. Frieder, B. and Grimm, V.E. Prenatal monosodium

glutamate (MSG) treatment

given through the mother's diet causes behavioural

deficits in rat offspring.

Intern J Neurosci, 23: 117-126, 1984.

14. Nikohletseas, M.M. Obesity in exercising, hypophagic

rats treated with

monosodium glutamate. Physiol Behav, 19: 767-773, 1977.

15. Zorumski, C. F. Environmental excitotoxins and

neurodegenerative

disorders. Biol Psychiatry, 27: 90A, 1990

16. Bai, G and Lipton, S. A. Aberrant RNA splicing in

sporadic amyotrophic

lateral sclerosis. Neuron, 20: 363-366, 1998

17. Lin, C. G., Bristol, L. A., Jin, L., Hoberg, M. D.,

Crawford, T.,

Clawson, L., and Rothstein, J. D. Aberrant RNA processing

in a neurodegenerative

disease: the cause for absent EAAT2, a glutamate

transporter, in amyotrophic

lateral sclerosis. Neuron, 20: 589-602, 1998

18. Olney, J.W. Excitotoxic amino acids and

neuropsychiatric disorders. Annu

Rev Pharmacol Toxicol, 30: 47-71, 1990.

19. Gann, D. Ventricular tachycardia in a patient with

the " Chinese

restaurant syndrome. " Southern Medical J, 70:

879-880, 1977.

20. Beatrice Trum Hunter. The Great Nutrition Robbery,

New York, NY: Charles

Scribner's Sons, 1978, page 35.

21. Kimber L. Rundlett and Daniel W. Armstrong.

Evaluation of free

D-glutamate in processed foods. Chirality,

1994;6:277-282.

22. Pommer, K. (Novo Nordisk BioChem Inc) Franklinton,

NC, Cereal Foods

World.

23. Broadwell, R.D., and Sofroniew, M.V. Serum proteins

bypass the

blood-brain fluid barriers for extracellular entry to the

central nervous system. Exp

Neurol, 120: 245-263, 1993.

 

All information Copyright ©1997,1998, 1999, 2000, 2001

PPNF. All rights

reserved.

 

 

 

 

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