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Thread: aspartame

  1. #1
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    aspartame

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    Good enough reasons to avoid aspartame.


    http://drbenkim.com/articles-artificialsweeteners.html

    Reasons to Avoid Aspartame

    Posted By Dr. Ben Kim on Dec 07, 2009 Health Warnings

    When Tim Gullickson, former professional tennis player and coach to Pete Sampras, died in 1996 from complications related to brain tumors, I distinctly remember reading about Tim's fondness for diet Coke; according to one close friend, Tim was addicted to the stuff - he always seemed to have a can in hand.

    When I began private practice a year later, within a few months, I encountered three patients who had brain tumors and drank several diet sodas a day. These findings were easy to notice and group together in my mind, as I took a detailed dietary survey during each new patient evaluation.

    From that point on, I shared my suspicions about aspartame with family, friends, and patients. And over time, I learned about the ways in which aspartame injures nervous tissue on a cellular level - most of my education on this issue has been from the work of Dr. Russell Blaylock, a retired neurosurgeon who has long maintained that aspartame and MSG are harmful to human health.

    Aspartame, the technical name for popular brand names NutraSweet, Equal, Spoonful, and Equal-Measure, has been documented by the United States FDA to be a cause of the following symptoms:

    Inability to concentrate
    Short-term memory loss
    Headaches
    Dizziness
    Trouble sleeping
    Depression and irritability
    Seizures
    Nausea
    Numbness
    Muscle spasms
    Fatigue
    Difficulty breathing
    Heart irregularities
    Joint Pain
    Why is Aspartame Harmful to Your Health?
    To put it simply, aspartame is toxic to your nervous system. Enough exposure to aspartame can lead to nerve cell death.

    Aspartame - also know as 1-aspartyl 1 phenylalanine methyl ester - is made up of the following components:

    Wood Alcohol (methanol) - about 10%

    Phenylalanine - about 50%

    Aspartic acid - about 40%

    Problems with Wood Alcohol
    The United States Environmental Protective Agency says that the average person can consume 7.8 milligrams of wood alcohol per day without negative effects - some cans of diet soda have been found to have double this amount.

    Although wood alcohol naturally occurs in some of the foods that we eat, it doesn't come naturally bound to amino acids as it does in aspartame. Rather, in nature, wood alcohol typically comes attached to fiber that allows it to pass through the digestive tract without being absorbed into the bloodstream.

    Since wood alcohol that comes with aspartame doesn't have fiber to keep it out of your bloodstream, just about all of it gets absorbed into your blood, where it can spontaneously convert to formaldehyde, a poisonous substance that is an established carcinogen.

    Metabolism of formaldehyde in your body can lead to the production of formate, a waste product that, if accumulated in large amounts, can cause metabolic acidosis and ensuing blindness, kidney damage, and even death. Clearly, this could only potentially happen if you consume extremely large quantities of aspartame and your body's buffering mechanisms fail to prevent metabolic acidosis.

    Problems with Phenylalanine
    When exposed to high temperatures or simply stored for a long period of time, aspartame breaks down into a few different compounds, one of which is aspartylphenylalanine diketopiperazine (DKP).

    There is some evidence to suggest that DKP can undergo a nitrosation process in the stomach, which can lead to the production of a chemical that may cause brain tumors.

    Since many food products and beverages are exposed to extremely high temperatures during distribution and storage, especially in areas of the world where the climate is hot year-round, the presence of and potential harmful effects of DKP become more worrisome in regions and countries that are closer to the equator.

    Also, it's worth noting that whenever your body is exposed to a sudden surge in phenylalanine, the break down of phenylalanine to a larger-than-normal supply of neurotransmitters (L-dopa, norepinephrine, and epinephrine) may create imbalances in nerve signaling that may cause any number of symptoms, including:

    Anxiety attacks and nervousness
    Seizures
    Headaches
    Heart palpitations
    Problems with Aspartic Acid
    Like phenylalanine, aspartic acid is an amino acid that naturally occurs in foods. When your body obtains these amino acids along with other naturally occurring amino acids, enzymes, vitamins, and minerals, your cells can put phenylalanine and aspartic acid to use for normal metabolic activities.

    When you introduce abnormally large amounts of phenylalanine and aspartic acid (synthetically bound together by an ester bond) into your bloodstream - which is exactly what happens whenever you drink a can of soda that is sweetened with aspartame - your cells can be overwhelmed.

    Specifically, a surge in aspartic acid can lead to over-stimulation of nerve cells and sometimes even nerve cell death - this overstimulation is what Dr. Blaylock refers to as excitotoxicity.

    The risk of experiencing nerve cell death from ingesting too much aspartame is higher in people who smoke, have high blood pressure, or have diabetes, as all of these factors potentially increase the permeability of the blood-brain barrier that is supposed to protect your nerve cells against excitotoxins. It's safe to assume that the more your overall health is compromised, the more susceptible your nerve cells are to the toxic effects of aspartic acid.

    Pregnant and nursing moms should know that babies in the womb and newborns are particularly susceptible to having aspartic acid cross the blood-brain barrier, so it's especially advisable to avoid aspartame during these times.

    If you'd like to avoid aspartame, please keep in mind that it's a common ingredient in many packaged foods and beverages, particularly those that are marketed as being sugar-free or low in calories. Examples include sugar-free or low calorie:

    Yogurt
    Chewing gum
    Soft drinks
    Cookies and candy bars that are made for diabetics
    Frozen desserts
    Artificial sweeteners
    Cough candies, drops, and syrups
    Chewable vitamins
    Be sure to read through the list of ingredients on all packaged foods and avoid those that list aspartame, NutraSweet, Equal, Spoonful, and Equal-Measure.

    If you're relatively healthy, your body can likely handle some exposure to aspartame without experiencing irreversible damage. Still, it's hard to justify hurting your health, even just a little, by knowingly ingesting aspartame.

    The great danger with aspartame is in regularly consuming it - the most common example is the person who drinks a few or more diet sodas every day. If you know anyone who belongs in this category and is open to looking into this matter, please consider sharing this post.

    If you happen to be one of those people who just can't do without the "bite" that sodas provide, one healthy alternative is to combine fruit juice with sparkling water. Too much fruit juice isn't good for your blood sugar-regulating mechanisms, but every once in a while, a glass that combines three-quarters fruit juice and one-quarter sparkling water should satisfy your need for a biting beverage.

  2. #2
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    Thanks for posting. I avoid diet sodas but just checked my chewing gum and saw aspartame as an ingredient. It's time to find a new brand of gum.

  3. #3
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    Several years ago my mom's doc thought her autonomic nervous system was collapsing. Everything was falling apart and going wrong, and her prognosis was looking pretty grim. She had a check-up with her diabetes specialist, who immediately asked her how much diet pop she was drinking and told her to stop it entirely.

    Her nervous system recovered.

    Aspartame is bad stuff.

    I can't stand it, I get a very upset stomach from it. So does my kid. And after her experience with it, believe me we avoid it!
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  4. #4
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    Any known major issues with Splenda? I do try to avoid all artificial sweeteners (not sure how good it is to trick one's body into thinking it's consuming massive amounts of calories when it's not), but I do drink it in tea with some regularity and very occasionally coffee (have tried to train myself to unsweetened, and it hasn't worked). Otherwise, it's water except for the maybe once a month small glass of fruit juice or an occasional small glass of soy milk if I'm running out of the house without breakfast.
    Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...

  5. #5
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    Aspartame gives me a wicked headache. I'm pretty good at spotting and avoiding it. Soda is easy, since I rarely drink it. I had some jello that tasted too sweet at a church potluck, forgetting about sugarless jello. Shortly thereafter, WHAM! I asked the woman who brought it and sure enough... aspartame.

    Deb

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Blueberry View Post
    Any known major issues with Splenda? I do try to avoid all artificial sweeteners (not sure how good it is to trick one's body into thinking it's consuming massive amounts of calories when it's not), but I do drink it in tea with some regularity and very occasionally coffee (have tried to train myself to unsweetened, and it hasn't worked). Otherwise, it's water except for the maybe once a month small glass of fruit juice or an occasional small glass of soy milk if I'm running out of the house without breakfast.
    I prefer sugar in my tea (16 calories), but stevia is a runner up. You can find it in packets (Stevia in the Raw)

  7. #7
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    Stevia is illegal here. I don't know why.

  8. #8
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    I'd imagine Splenda's under the radar now but something will pop up. I think if you're using just small quantities of sweetner in your tea/coffee, you're just better off to using sugar, or my favourite, honey.

    I've tried stevia, and I just can't get over that bitter undernote.

    I usually have raw cane sugar in my house, but that usually gets used in cooking and baking. Luckily I don't like sweetened hot drinks so I get away with not using sugar much in my daily life (if I don't eat out or eat processed foods, that is).

  9. #9
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    Thanks for the post. I have been in the process of decreasing my consumption of it. After reading this..no more for me. Yikes.

  10. #10
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    I used to be a diet coke addict. Gave it up. If I have to have pop (soda), which is very rare, I drink the sugarful stuff.
    The chewing gum thing; I have not found any (in Canada) that don't have some aspartame - it seems it is in everything!


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  11. #11
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    the odd time I have gum, I buy Spry, which is xylitol gum. Gets hard and loses flavour after about 10 chews, but that's what it is, I guess.

  12. #12
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    I do not like aspartame at all. It hurts my stomach so much that I can't leave the house. That is linked to my IBS. But I know it bothers a lot of people. We won't drink it at our house and we won't let our daughter have it. I do think it's evil lol.

    However, I have to say that aspartame is one of the most researched food products out there and no unbiased researchers ever agreed that it was harmful. Some people are just intolerant to it. That's what the common agreement is. It's used so much in North America people are bound to have reactions

    Again, that doesn't mean I think it's good for you.

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by papaver View Post
    Stevia is illegal here. I don't know why.
    There was a study done in the '80s that showed that one of the breakdown products was mutagenic in rats. It's disputed, though.

  14. #14
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    I developed neurological tremors after changing to Diet Dr Pepper in 2003. There is no family history of them, I wonder if my DDP addiction might be a key? I stopped seeing a neurologist because I didn't feel like the were attentive and I was sick of being doped up on Primidone. I have been trying to cut down on my soda intake for other reasons, if I can kick the habit it would be nice to stop shaking too. Caffeine limitation alone should help some.
    Amanda

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