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Symptoms which
May be Due to Aspartame
What kinds of symptoms may occur as a result of ingesting aspartame? They may
involve almost any system of the body. Probably the most common are headaches,
including migraines. As I mentioned, one can also experience seizures. Some
pilots have lost their licenses after having experienced seizures from
aspartame. Several articles have appeared in flying magazines.
Other neurologic or
psychiatric symptoms include dizziness, unsteadiness, confusion, severe
drowziness and sleepiness, numbness, hyperactivity--especially in children,
severe depression, irritability, anxiety, aggression, personality changes,
insomnia and phobias.
Visual changes may
include blurred vision, blindness, pain and reduced tears. Ringing or buzzing in
the ears, hearing impairment or noise intolerance occur in some people.
Palpitations, shortness of breath or recent high blood pressure may mimic a
heart condition.
Other systems that
can be affected are the gastrointestinal system, including diarrhea, nausea and
abdominal pain; the skin, including itching and hives; and the endocrine system,
including loss of control of diabetes, menstrual changes, marked weight loss or
gain and aggravated low blood sugar.
To see if you are
being affected by aspartame, eliminate all aspartame products for about two
weeks. If some of your symptoms improve, you may then reintroduce aspartame and
see if your symptoms return. If they do, you should probably eliminate aspartame
entirely.
Mechanisms in the
Biochemistry and Pharmacology of Aspartame which May Explain the Various
Symptoms
Research over the past twenty years has shown that certain "natural"
substances found in the body act as excitotoxins in the brain when found at high
levels. These substances can overstimulate and kill brain cells, causing mild to
severe brain damage. There has been speculation that this mechanism may help to
explain such diseases as Parkinson's Disease, Alzheimer's Disease and Lou
Gehrig's Disease. Examples of neuroexcitatory toxins in high concentrations are
monosodium glutamate, also known as MSG and components or breakdown products of
aspartame. The effects of these substances are both additive and cumulative.
Aspartame consists
of three molecules joined together. They are: (1) 50% phenyl alanine, an amino
acid found in food, which can be neurotoxic in high quantities and can cause
seizures in certain susceptible people; (2) 40% aspartic acid, also an amino
acid found in food, which is a neuroexciter and neurotoxic in high
concentrations; and (3) 10% methanol or methyl alcohol, which is also called
wood alcohol. Free methanol is quite toxic even in relatively low
concentrations.
The FDA and
manufacturers response to the many expressed concerns of the damaging effects of
methanol in aspartame is to point out that it occurs naturally in fruit juices
and vegetables. They neglect to state that in these foods, the methanol is in a
bound form and the human body does not have the digestive enzymes that breakdown
the pectin and release the methanol into the bloodstream. In addition, natural
methanol is always accompanied by ethanol in higher concentrations, which acts
to protect the body against any damage. The methanol in aspartame is in free
form and can be absorbed.
Some of the
breakdown metabolic products of these substances are also toxic and
carcinogenic. Thus, you can see that there are many possible mechanisms by which
aspartame is potentially toxic and dangerous.
An additional
concern about aspartame is that it tends to lower serotonin in the brain. Low
brain serotonin levels are associated with depression. The FDA has banned the
food supplement tryptophan, the essential amino acid responsible for making
serotonin in the brain. With so much aspartame being used and no tryptophan
available to increase brain serotonin levels, is it any wonder that the new
anti-depressant serotonin reuptake inhibitor drugs, such as Prozac, have become
so popular.
Who is at risk for
experiencing aspartame toxicity? At least 30% of the population is sensitive to
moderate doses of aspartame and may suffer from any of the symptoms that I've
previously discussed. Women are 3 times more likely to suffer symptoms and
pregnant women may put their unborn babies at risk. The undeveloped nervous
systems of children are more vulnerable to even mild doses. An example of a
subpopulation of adults who may be more susceptible to symptoms are phenyl
ketonuria or PKU carriers.
Phenyl ketonuria or
PKU is an inherited disease in which babies lack an enzyme necessary to convert
phenyl alanine to tyrosine. If given foods containing phenyl alanine, they
accumulate excessive phenyl alanine in the brain, which results in permanent
brain damage and mental retardation. Their parents are carriers of the disease
and also have some difficulty metabolizing phenyl alanine. These carriers of PKU,
of which there are between four and twenty million in the United States, are
among those most susceptible to the toxic effects of aspartame.
The FDA &
manufacturers of aspartame claim that all of the adverse symptoms reported are
"anecdotal". Because it is common that a person will not experience
noticeable illness from a short term usage of aspartame, this is taken as proof
that there is no problem with safety. Unfortunately, this position ignores the
fact that the effects of aspartame poisoning are cumulative.
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