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More aspartame side effects revealed

More aspartame side effects revealed - headaches, blurred vision,

neurological symptoms and more

Wednesday, March 28, 2012 by: Aurora Geib

http://www.naturalnews.com/035382_aspartame_side_effects_headaches.html#ixzz1qQx\

2Nquc

(NaturalNews) For a great majority of Americans who consume processed food,

food additives are an ever-present component of the menu and one with

serious health effects. In the United States as well as in Canada,

aspartame - an artificial low-calorie sweetener - has been used as a food

additive as early as 1981 after it was approved for use in dry goods. It was

approved again in the US in 1983 for carbonated drinks. This approval came

in the face of much opposition which has not seen any respite over the

ensuing years despite the claims of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

and the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) of the World Health

Organization that aspartame is safe for use.

Why aspartame is dangerous

75 percent of reported adverse reaction to food additives is attributed to

aspartame. Of these reactions, many are serious and include seizures and

death. A number of the 90 documented symptoms as reportedly caused by

aspartame are headaches/migraines, dizziness, seizures, nausea, numbness,

rashes, depression, irritability, insomnia, hearing loss, vision problems,

loss of taste vertigo and memory loss.

Those who study the adverse effects of aspartame report that the following

medical conditions are triggered or worsened by aspartame: brain tumors,

multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, mental retardation,

Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, lymphoma, birth defects, diabetes and

fibromyalgia.

And that's not all -- according to Iness-Brown in her book " My

Aspartame Experiment, " aspartame is also addictive.

What is aspartame composed of?

To understand the effects of aspartame one must look at its genetic

composition. This substance - which is 200 times sweeter than sugar - is

made of 50 percent phenylalanine, 40 percent aspartic acid and ten percent

methanol.

Aspartic acid

Blaylock, a neurosurgery professor at the Medical University of

Mississippi, describes aspartic acid as an isolated amino acid that is just

as toxic as glutamate, another popular additive. Aspartic acid is an

excitotoxin, a chemical that excites the brain to the point of death. It

alters the manner of brain formation in newborn infants, permanently

resulting in hyperactivity and behavioral changes in children.

In its free form, unbound from proteins, it significantly raises the plasma

level shortly after ingestion. The excess aspartate in the blood shortly

after ingestion leads to high levels in certain areas of the brain. It

slowly begins to destroy neurons and a large part of neural cells in a

particular area of a brain are destroyed before any clinical symptom of an

illness is noticed. Reported physical effects after long exposure to

excitatory amino acid include Parkinson's disease, brain lesions,

neuroendocrine disorders and hypoglycemia to mention a few.

Pregnant women and lactating mothers increase their risk by consuming

aspartame-laden products because the child's brain barrier, which protects

the brain from excess aspartate and other toxins, is not developed enough to

protect it from this chemical. Moreover, while in the womb and during the

first year of life, these compounds can have free access to the nervous

system due to the fragility of the infant's blood brain barrier during this

stage of development.

Phenylalanine

Phenylalanine is an amino acid. Individuals with phenylketonuria, a genetic

disorder, cannot utilize phenylalanine, causing possible buildup in the

body. Even for persons who are not suffering from phenylketonuria, it has

been shown that ingesting aspartame together with carbohydrates can cause

increased levels in the body. Excess phenylalanine in the body causes the

serotonin levels to dip leading to emotional disorders like depression.

Human testing has shown that phenylalanine levels significantly increased in

subjects who chronically used aspartame.

Methanol

Methanol is a neurotoxin and an extremely harmful substance. The enzyme

chymotrypsin facilitates its release in the small intestine. Its absorption

is sped up when aspartame is heated above 30 centigrad - or above 86

Fahrenheit - creating free methanol. This normally occurs when products

containing aspartame are improperly stored or when subjected to heat.

Normally, methanol breaks down into formaldehyde and formic acid.

Formaldehyde interferes with DNA reproduction, retinal damage and birth

defects. Its toxicity affects the nervous system, taking approximately ten

to thirty hours before symptoms manifest - the most common of which is

vision impairment. The symptoms for methanol poisoning have been reported to

include dizziness, nausea, gastrointestinal disturbances, memory lapses and

numbness to name a few.

A consumption limit of 7.8mg/day is recommended, but a one liter of an

aspartame sweetened drink contains about 56 mg of methanol. Heavy users of

products containing aspartame consume as much as 250mg of methanol a day or

32 times the recommended limit.

Since humans do not possess certain key enzymes that animal subjects

possess, human are more sensitive to the toxic effects of methanol. It is

without doubt that animal testing on aspartame or methanol does not

accurately reflect the potential danger for humans.

Do not wait, act now!

In sum, recent research on aspartame has just revealed what appears to the

tip of an enormous iceberg. Defenders of aspartame consistently insist that

aspartame is safe to use after having been affirmed by the US FDA 26 times

for the last 23 years. However, doubts as to its safety will always linger

when well-respected researchers such as Dr. Blaylock and the Ramazzini

Foundation speak out about its possible adverse effects and put their

reputations on the line for what they believe in. This is even without

taking into consideration the questionable circumstance that led to the

approval of aspartame in the first place.

Next time you open a diet soda think about the possible consequences.

Sometimes, it takes years before a problem manifests itself; by then, it

maybe too late for you to do anything about it.

Sources for this article:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov [environment health perspective journal]

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca

http://www.organicconsumers.org/toxic/msg010306.cfm

http://www.aspartame.org/aspartame_experts.html

http://www.colorado.edu

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Phenylananine and aspartic acid are toxic?

Ohhh well, if that's true then we are all screwed, because they are essential

amino acids.

More aspartame side effects revealed

More aspartame side effects revealed - headaches, blurred vision,

neurological symptoms and more

Wednesday, March 28, 2012 by: Aurora Geib

http://www.naturalnews.com/035382_aspartame_side_effects_headaches.html#ixzz1qQx\

2Nquc

(NaturalNews) For a great majority of Americans who consume processed food,

food additives are an ever-present component of the menu and one with

serious health effects. In the United States as well as in Canada,

aspartame - an artificial low-calorie sweetener - has been used as a food

additive as early as 1981 after it was approved for use in dry goods. It was

approved again in the US in 1983 for carbonated drinks. This approval came

in the face of much opposition which has not seen any respite over the

ensuing years despite the claims of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

and the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) of the World Health

Organization that aspartame is safe for use.

Why aspartame is dangerous

75 percent of reported adverse reaction to food additives is attributed to

aspartame. Of these reactions, many are serious and include seizures and

death. A number of the 90 documented symptoms as reportedly caused by

aspartame are headaches/migraines, dizziness, seizures, nausea, numbness,

rashes, depression, irritability, insomnia, hearing loss, vision problems,

loss of taste vertigo and memory loss.

Those who study the adverse effects of aspartame report that the following

medical conditions are triggered or worsened by aspartame: brain tumors,

multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, mental retardation,

Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, lymphoma, birth defects, diabetes and

fibromyalgia.

And that's not all -- according to Iness-Brown in her book " My

Aspartame Experiment, " aspartame is also addictive.

What is aspartame composed of?

To understand the effects of aspartame one must look at its genetic

composition. This substance - which is 200 times sweeter than sugar - is

made of 50 percent phenylalanine, 40 percent aspartic acid and ten percent

methanol.

Aspartic acid

Blaylock, a neurosurgery professor at the Medical University of

Mississippi, describes aspartic acid as an isolated amino acid that is just

as toxic as glutamate, another popular additive. Aspartic acid is an

excitotoxin, a chemical that excites the brain to the point of death. It

alters the manner of brain formation in newborn infants, permanently

resulting in hyperactivity and behavioral changes in children.

In its free form, unbound from proteins, it significantly raises the plasma

level shortly after ingestion. The excess aspartate in the blood shortly

after ingestion leads to high levels in certain areas of the brain. It

slowly begins to destroy neurons and a large part of neural cells in a

particular area of a brain are destroyed before any clinical symptom of an

illness is noticed. Reported physical effects after long exposure to

excitatory amino acid include Parkinson's disease, brain lesions,

neuroendocrine disorders and hypoglycemia to mention a few.

Pregnant women and lactating mothers increase their risk by consuming

aspartame-laden products because the child's brain barrier, which protects

the brain from excess aspartate and other toxins, is not developed enough to

protect it from this chemical. Moreover, while in the womb and during the

first year of life, these compounds can have free access to the nervous

system due to the fragility of the infant's blood brain barrier during this

stage of development.

Phenylalanine

Phenylalanine is an amino acid. Individuals with phenylketonuria, a genetic

disorder, cannot utilize phenylalanine, causing possible buildup in the

body. Even for persons who are not suffering from phenylketonuria, it has

been shown that ingesting aspartame together with carbohydrates can cause

increased levels in the body. Excess phenylalanine in the body causes the

serotonin levels to dip leading to emotional disorders like depression.

Human testing has shown that phenylalanine levels significantly increased in

subjects who chronically used aspartame.

Methanol

Methanol is a neurotoxin and an extremely harmful substance. The enzyme

chymotrypsin facilitates its release in the small intestine. Its absorption

is sped up when aspartame is heated above 30 centigrad - or above 86

Fahrenheit - creating free methanol. This normally occurs when products

containing aspartame are improperly stored or when subjected to heat.

Normally, methanol breaks down into formaldehyde and formic acid.

Formaldehyde interferes with DNA reproduction, retinal damage and birth

defects. Its toxicity affects the nervous system, taking approximately ten

to thirty hours before symptoms manifest - the most common of which is

vision impairment. The symptoms for methanol poisoning have been reported to

include dizziness, nausea, gastrointestinal disturbances, memory lapses and

numbness to name a few.

A consumption limit of 7.8mg/day is recommended, but a one liter of an

aspartame sweetened drink contains about 56 mg of methanol. Heavy users of

products containing aspartame consume as much as 250mg of methanol a day or

32 times the recommended limit.

Since humans do not possess certain key enzymes that animal subjects

possess, human are more sensitive to the toxic effects of methanol. It is

without doubt that animal testing on aspartame or methanol does not

accurately reflect the potential danger for humans.

Do not wait, act now!

In sum, recent research on aspartame has just revealed what appears to the

tip of an enormous iceberg. Defenders of aspartame consistently insist that

aspartame is safe to use after having been affirmed by the US FDA 26 times

for the last 23 years. However, doubts as to its safety will always linger

when well-respected researchers such as Dr. Blaylock and the Ramazzini

Foundation speak out about its possible adverse effects and put their

reputations on the line for what they believe in. This is even without

taking into consideration the questionable circumstance that led to the

approval of aspartame in the first place.

Next time you open a diet soda think about the possible consequences.

Sometimes, it takes years before a problem manifests itself; by then, it

maybe too late for you to do anything about it.

Sources for this article:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov [environment health perspective journal]

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca

http://www.organicconsumers.org/toxic/msg010306.cfm

http://www.aspartame.org/aspartame_experts.html

http://www.colorado.edu

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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A serving of tomato juice provides about four to six times more methanol than

the same service size of your average aspartame-sweetened beverage.

More aspartame side effects revealed

More aspartame side effects revealed - headaches, blurred vision,

neurological symptoms and more

Wednesday, March 28, 2012 by: Aurora Geib

http://www.naturalnews.com/035382_aspartame_side_effects_headaches.html#ixzz1qQx\

2Nquc

(NaturalNews) For a great majority of Americans who consume processed food,

food additives are an ever-present component of the menu and one with

serious health effects. In the United States as well as in Canada,

aspartame - an artificial low-calorie sweetener - has been used as a food

additive as early as 1981 after it was approved for use in dry goods. It was

approved again in the US in 1983 for carbonated drinks. This approval came

in the face of much opposition which has not seen any respite over the

ensuing years despite the claims of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

and the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) of the World Health

Organization that aspartame is safe for use.

Why aspartame is dangerous

75 percent of reported adverse reaction to food additives is attributed to

aspartame. Of these reactions, many are serious and include seizures and

death. A number of the 90 documented symptoms as reportedly caused by

aspartame are headaches/migraines, dizziness, seizures, nausea, numbness,

rashes, depression, irritability, insomnia, hearing loss, vision problems,

loss of taste vertigo and memory loss.

Those who study the adverse effects of aspartame report that the following

medical conditions are triggered or worsened by aspartame: brain tumors,

multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, mental retardation,

Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, lymphoma, birth defects, diabetes and

fibromyalgia.

And that's not all -- according to Iness-Brown in her book " My

Aspartame Experiment, " aspartame is also addictive.

What is aspartame composed of?

To understand the effects of aspartame one must look at its genetic

composition. This substance - which is 200 times sweeter than sugar - is

made of 50 percent phenylalanine, 40 percent aspartic acid and ten percent

methanol.

Aspartic acid

Blaylock, a neurosurgery professor at the Medical University of

Mississippi, describes aspartic acid as an isolated amino acid that is just

as toxic as glutamate, another popular additive. Aspartic acid is an

excitotoxin, a chemical that excites the brain to the point of death. It

alters the manner of brain formation in newborn infants, permanently

resulting in hyperactivity and behavioral changes in children.

In its free form, unbound from proteins, it significantly raises the plasma

level shortly after ingestion. The excess aspartate in the blood shortly

after ingestion leads to high levels in certain areas of the brain. It

slowly begins to destroy neurons and a large part of neural cells in a

particular area of a brain are destroyed before any clinical symptom of an

illness is noticed. Reported physical effects after long exposure to

excitatory amino acid include Parkinson's disease, brain lesions,

neuroendocrine disorders and hypoglycemia to mention a few.

Pregnant women and lactating mothers increase their risk by consuming

aspartame-laden products because the child's brain barrier, which protects

the brain from excess aspartate and other toxins, is not developed enough to

protect it from this chemical. Moreover, while in the womb and during the

first year of life, these compounds can have free access to the nervous

system due to the fragility of the infant's blood brain barrier during this

stage of development.

Phenylalanine

Phenylalanine is an amino acid. Individuals with phenylketonuria, a genetic

disorder, cannot utilize phenylalanine, causing possible buildup in the

body. Even for persons who are not suffering from phenylketonuria, it has

been shown that ingesting aspartame together with carbohydrates can cause

increased levels in the body. Excess phenylalanine in the body causes the

serotonin levels to dip leading to emotional disorders like depression.

Human testing has shown that phenylalanine levels significantly increased in

subjects who chronically used aspartame.

Methanol

Methanol is a neurotoxin and an extremely harmful substance. The enzyme

chymotrypsin facilitates its release in the small intestine. Its absorption

is sped up when aspartame is heated above 30 centigrad - or above 86

Fahrenheit - creating free methanol. This normally occurs when products

containing aspartame are improperly stored or when subjected to heat.

Normally, methanol breaks down into formaldehyde and formic acid.

Formaldehyde interferes with DNA reproduction, retinal damage and birth

defects. Its toxicity affects the nervous system, taking approximately ten

to thirty hours before symptoms manifest - the most common of which is

vision impairment. The symptoms for methanol poisoning have been reported to

include dizziness, nausea, gastrointestinal disturbances, memory lapses and

numbness to name a few.

A consumption limit of 7.8mg/day is recommended, but a one liter of an

aspartame sweetened drink contains about 56 mg of methanol. Heavy users of

products containing aspartame consume as much as 250mg of methanol a day or

32 times the recommended limit.

Since humans do not possess certain key enzymes that animal subjects

possess, human are more sensitive to the toxic effects of methanol. It is

without doubt that animal testing on aspartame or methanol does not

accurately reflect the potential danger for humans.

Do not wait, act now!

In sum, recent research on aspartame has just revealed what appears to the

tip of an enormous iceberg. Defenders of aspartame consistently insist that

aspartame is safe to use after having been affirmed by the US FDA 26 times

for the last 23 years. However, doubts as to its safety will always linger

when well-respected researchers such as Dr. Blaylock and the Ramazzini

Foundation speak out about its possible adverse effects and put their

reputations on the line for what they believe in. This is even without

taking into consideration the questionable circumstance that led to the

approval of aspartame in the first place.

Next time you open a diet soda think about the possible consequences.

Sometimes, it takes years before a problem manifests itself; by then, it

maybe too late for you to do anything about it.

Sources for this article:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov [environment health perspective journal]

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca

http://www.organicconsumers.org/toxic/msg010306.cfm

http://www.aspartame.org/aspartame_experts.html

http://www.colorado.edu

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...
Guest guest

Like a lot of things, how toxic it is depends on the quantity taken plus the

quality -- but also if it is artificial or not

>

> Phenylananine and aspartic acid are toxic?

>

> Ohhh well, if that's true then we are all screwed, because they are essential

amino acids.

>

>

>

>

>

>

> More aspartame side effects revealed

>

> More aspartame side effects revealed - headaches, blurred vision,

> neurological symptoms and more

> Wednesday, March 28, 2012 by: Aurora Geib

>

>

http://www.naturalnews.com/035382_aspartame_side_effects_headaches.html#ixzz1qQx\

2Nquc

>

> (NaturalNews) For a great majority of Americans who consume processed food,

> food additives are an ever-present component of the menu and one with

> serious health effects. In the United States as well as in Canada,

> aspartame - an artificial low-calorie sweetener - has been used as a food

> additive as early as 1981 after it was approved for use in dry goods. It was

> approved again in the US in 1983 for carbonated drinks. This approval came

> in the face of much opposition which has not seen any respite over the

> ensuing years despite the claims of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

> and the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) of the World Health

> Organization that aspartame is safe for use.

>

>

>

> Why aspartame is dangerous

> 75 percent of reported adverse reaction to food additives is attributed to

> aspartame. Of these reactions, many are serious and include seizures and

> death. A number of the 90 documented symptoms as reportedly caused by

> aspartame are headaches/migraines, dizziness, seizures, nausea, numbness,

> rashes, depression, irritability, insomnia, hearing loss, vision problems,

> loss of taste vertigo and memory loss.

>

> Those who study the adverse effects of aspartame report that the following

> medical conditions are triggered or worsened by aspartame: brain tumors,

> multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, mental retardation,

> Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, lymphoma, birth defects, diabetes and

> fibromyalgia.

>

> And that's not all -- according to Iness-Brown in her book " My

> Aspartame Experiment, " aspartame is also addictive.

>

>

>

> What is aspartame composed of?

> To understand the effects of aspartame one must look at its genetic

> composition. This substance - which is 200 times sweeter than sugar - is

> made of 50 percent phenylalanine, 40 percent aspartic acid and ten percent

> methanol.

>

>

>

> Aspartic acid

> Blaylock, a neurosurgery professor at the Medical University of

> Mississippi, describes aspartic acid as an isolated amino acid that is just

> as toxic as glutamate, another popular additive. Aspartic acid is an

> excitotoxin, a chemical that excites the brain to the point of death. It

> alters the manner of brain formation in newborn infants, permanently

> resulting in hyperactivity and behavioral changes in children.

>

> In its free form, unbound from proteins, it significantly raises the plasma

> level shortly after ingestion. The excess aspartate in the blood shortly

> after ingestion leads to high levels in certain areas of the brain. It

> slowly begins to destroy neurons and a large part of neural cells in a

> particular area of a brain are destroyed before any clinical symptom of an

> illness is noticed. Reported physical effects after long exposure to

> excitatory amino acid include Parkinson's disease, brain lesions,

> neuroendocrine disorders and hypoglycemia to mention a few.

>

> Pregnant women and lactating mothers increase their risk by consuming

> aspartame-laden products because the child's brain barrier, which protects

> the brain from excess aspartate and other toxins, is not developed enough to

> protect it from this chemical. Moreover, while in the womb and during the

> first year of life, these compounds can have free access to the nervous

> system due to the fragility of the infant's blood brain barrier during this

> stage of development.

>

>

>

> Phenylalanine

> Phenylalanine is an amino acid. Individuals with phenylketonuria, a genetic

> disorder, cannot utilize phenylalanine, causing possible buildup in the

> body. Even for persons who are not suffering from phenylketonuria, it has

> been shown that ingesting aspartame together with carbohydrates can cause

> increased levels in the body. Excess phenylalanine in the body causes the

> serotonin levels to dip leading to emotional disorders like depression.

> Human testing has shown that phenylalanine levels significantly increased in

> subjects who chronically used aspartame.

>

>

>

> Methanol

> Methanol is a neurotoxin and an extremely harmful substance. The enzyme

> chymotrypsin facilitates its release in the small intestine. Its absorption

> is sped up when aspartame is heated above 30 centigrad - or above 86

> Fahrenheit - creating free methanol. This normally occurs when products

> containing aspartame are improperly stored or when subjected to heat.

>

> Normally, methanol breaks down into formaldehyde and formic acid.

> Formaldehyde interferes with DNA reproduction, retinal damage and birth

> defects. Its toxicity affects the nervous system, taking approximately ten

> to thirty hours before symptoms manifest - the most common of which is

> vision impairment. The symptoms for methanol poisoning have been reported to

> include dizziness, nausea, gastrointestinal disturbances, memory lapses and

> numbness to name a few.

>

> A consumption limit of 7.8mg/day is recommended, but a one liter of an

> aspartame sweetened drink contains about 56 mg of methanol. Heavy users of

> products containing aspartame consume as much as 250mg of methanol a day or

> 32 times the recommended limit.

>

> Since humans do not possess certain key enzymes that animal subjects

> possess, human are more sensitive to the toxic effects of methanol. It is

> without doubt that animal testing on aspartame or methanol does not

> accurately reflect the potential danger for humans.

>

>

>

> Do not wait, act now!

> In sum, recent research on aspartame has just revealed what appears to the

> tip of an enormous iceberg. Defenders of aspartame consistently insist that

> aspartame is safe to use after having been affirmed by the US FDA 26 times

> for the last 23 years. However, doubts as to its safety will always linger

> when well-respected researchers such as Dr. Blaylock and the Ramazzini

> Foundation speak out about its possible adverse effects and put their

> reputations on the line for what they believe in. This is even without

> taking into consideration the questionable circumstance that led to the

> approval of aspartame in the first place.

>

> Next time you open a diet soda think about the possible consequences.

> Sometimes, it takes years before a problem manifests itself; by then, it

> maybe too late for you to do anything about it.

>

> Sources for this article:

>

> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov [environment health perspective journal]

> http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca

> http://www.organicconsumers.org/toxic/msg010306.cfm

> http://www.aspartame.org/aspartame_experts.html

> http://www.colorado.edu

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Once again Shan you are making statements that just aren't backed up by provable

fact.

More aspartame side effects revealed

>

> More aspartame side effects revealed - headaches, blurred vision,

> neurological symptoms and more

> Wednesday, March 28, 2012 by: Aurora Geib

>

>

http://www.naturalnews.com/035382_aspartame_side_effects_headaches.html#ixzz1qQx\

2Nquc

>

> (NaturalNews) For a great majority of Americans who consume processed food,

> food additives are an ever-present component of the menu and one with

> serious health effects. In the United States as well as in Canada,

> aspartame - an artificial low-calorie sweetener - has been used as a food

> additive as early as 1981 after it was approved for use in dry goods. It was

> approved again in the US in 1983 for carbonated drinks. This approval came

> in the face of much opposition which has not seen any respite over the

> ensuing years despite the claims of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

> and the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) of the World Health

> Organization that aspartame is safe for use.

>

>

>

> Why aspartame is dangerous

> 75 percent of reported adverse reaction to food additives is attributed to

> aspartame. Of these reactions, many are serious and include seizures and

> death. A number of the 90 documented symptoms as reportedly caused by

> aspartame are headaches/migraines, dizziness, seizures, nausea, numbness,

> rashes, depression, irritability, insomnia, hearing loss, vision problems,

> loss of taste vertigo and memory loss.

>

> Those who study the adverse effects of aspartame report that the following

> medical conditions are triggered or worsened by aspartame: brain tumors,

> multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, mental retardation,

> Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, lymphoma, birth defects, diabetes and

> fibromyalgia.

>

> And that's not all -- according to Iness-Brown in her book " My

> Aspartame Experiment, " aspartame is also addictive.

>

>

>

> What is aspartame composed of?

> To understand the effects of aspartame one must look at its genetic

> composition. This substance - which is 200 times sweeter than sugar - is

> made of 50 percent phenylalanine, 40 percent aspartic acid and ten percent

> methanol.

>

>

>

> Aspartic acid

> Blaylock, a neurosurgery professor at the Medical University of

> Mississippi, describes aspartic acid as an isolated amino acid that is just

> as toxic as glutamate, another popular additive. Aspartic acid is an

> excitotoxin, a chemical that excites the brain to the point of death. It

> alters the manner of brain formation in newborn infants, permanently

> resulting in hyperactivity and behavioral changes in children.

>

> In its free form, unbound from proteins, it significantly raises the plasma

> level shortly after ingestion. The excess aspartate in the blood shortly

> after ingestion leads to high levels in certain areas of the brain. It

> slowly begins to destroy neurons and a large part of neural cells in a

> particular area of a brain are destroyed before any clinical symptom of an

> illness is noticed. Reported physical effects after long exposure to

> excitatory amino acid include Parkinson's disease, brain lesions,

> neuroendocrine disorders and hypoglycemia to mention a few.

>

> Pregnant women and lactating mothers increase their risk by consuming

> aspartame-laden products because the child's brain barrier, which protects

> the brain from excess aspartate and other toxins, is not developed enough to

> protect it from this chemical. Moreover, while in the womb and during the

> first year of life, these compounds can have free access to the nervous

> system due to the fragility of the infant's blood brain barrier during this

> stage of development.

>

>

>

> Phenylalanine

> Phenylalanine is an amino acid. Individuals with phenylketonuria, a genetic

> disorder, cannot utilize phenylalanine, causing possible buildup in the

> body. Even for persons who are not suffering from phenylketonuria, it has

> been shown that ingesting aspartame together with carbohydrates can cause

> increased levels in the body. Excess phenylalanine in the body causes the

> serotonin levels to dip leading to emotional disorders like depression.

> Human testing has shown that phenylalanine levels significantly increased in

> subjects who chronically used aspartame.

>

>

>

> Methanol

> Methanol is a neurotoxin and an extremely harmful substance. The enzyme

> chymotrypsin facilitates its release in the small intestine. Its absorption

> is sped up when aspartame is heated above 30 centigrad - or above 86

> Fahrenheit - creating free methanol. This normally occurs when products

> containing aspartame are improperly stored or when subjected to heat.

>

> Normally, methanol breaks down into formaldehyde and formic acid.

> Formaldehyde interferes with DNA reproduction, retinal damage and birth

> defects. Its toxicity affects the nervous system, taking approximately ten

> to thirty hours before symptoms manifest - the most common of which is

> vision impairment. The symptoms for methanol poisoning have been reported to

> include dizziness, nausea, gastrointestinal disturbances, memory lapses and

> numbness to name a few.

>

> A consumption limit of 7.8mg/day is recommended, but a one liter of an

> aspartame sweetened drink contains about 56 mg of methanol. Heavy users of

> products containing aspartame consume as much as 250mg of methanol a day or

> 32 times the recommended limit.

>

> Since humans do not possess certain key enzymes that animal subjects

> possess, human are more sensitive to the toxic effects of methanol. It is

> without doubt that animal testing on aspartame or methanol does not

> accurately reflect the potential danger for humans.

>

>

>

> Do not wait, act now!

> In sum, recent research on aspartame has just revealed what appears to the

> tip of an enormous iceberg. Defenders of aspartame consistently insist that

> aspartame is safe to use after having been affirmed by the US FDA 26 times

> for the last 23 years. However, doubts as to its safety will always linger

> when well-respected researchers such as Dr. Blaylock and the Ramazzini

> Foundation speak out about its possible adverse effects and put their

> reputations on the line for what they believe in. This is even without

> taking into consideration the questionable circumstance that led to the

> approval of aspartame in the first place.

>

> Next time you open a diet soda think about the possible consequences.

> Sometimes, it takes years before a problem manifests itself; by then, it

> maybe too late for you to do anything about it.

>

> Sources for this article:

>

> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov [environment health perspective journal]

> http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca

> http://www.organicconsumers.org/toxic/msg010306.cfm

> http://www.aspartame.org/aspartame_experts.html

> http://www.colorado.edu

>

>

>

>

>

>

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