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Hi Alice. A good friend of mine who has MS recently found out that

aspartame had much to do with her condition...as well as the mercury

issue, it's important for you to know. Sorry this post is so long!

 

This article initially deals with fibro, but goes on to mention other

conditions. It is great information that many can use. Thought

you'd like to read it.

 

New evidence has shown that fibromyalgia is caused by excitotoxins,

such as MSG

and phenylalanine (an ingredient in aspartame).

 

The study " Smith JD, Terpening CM, Schmidt SO, Gums JG. Relief of

fibromyalgia

symptoms following discontinuation of dietary excitotoxins. Ann

Pharmacother

2001 Jun;35(6):702-6. " indicated that " Avoidance of excitotoxins like

MSG and

aspartame have been found to eliminate symptoms in some with

fibromyalgia. "

http://www.immunesupport.com/library/showarticle.cfm/id/3305

 

" Most patients do better if they give up caffeine, alcohol and other

stimulants

or excitotoxins like monosodium glutamate, aspartame and hydrolyzed

protein

entirely. " says By Dr. Zoltan P. Rona, M.D., MSc in

http://www.immunesupport.com/library/showarticle.cfm/id/3364

 

http://www.immunesupport.com/library/showarticle.cfm/ID/3202/

describes a

double study from a peer reviewed publication, entitled Relief of

Fibromyalgia

Symptoms Following Discontinuation of Dietary Excitotoxins - 11-28-

2001

Published in Ann Pharmacother 2001 Jun;35(6):702-6. Smith JD,

Terpening CM,

Schmidt SO, Gums JG. Malcolm Randall Veterans Affairs Medical Center,

Gainesville, FL, USA. PMID: 11408989.

 

This reports states that all of the test subjects " had complete, or

nearly

complete, resolution of their symptoms within months after eliminating

monosodium glutamate (MSG) or MSG plus aspartame from their diet. All

patients

were women with multiple comorbidities prior to elimination of MSG.

All have

had recurrence of symptoms whenever MSG is ingested. "

 

The report describes how " Excitotoxins are molecules, such as MSG and

aspartate, that act as excitatory neurotransmitters, and can lead to

neurotoxicity when used in excess. "

 

http://www.immunesupport.com/library/showarticle.cfm/ID/1561/

describes the

case of a woman who recovered form fibromyalgia, and it states " She

won't eat

or drink anything with aspartame in it, such is diet sodas, because

the

artificial sweetener aggravates most FMS symptoms. "

 

None of these articles describe the mechanism of aspartame's effect on

fybromyalgia, but I will now show the links to that:

 

Serotonin in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome & Fibromyalgia is the title of

an article

found at http://www.immunesupport.com/library/showarticle.cfm/id/3420

which

indicates that " serotonin metabolism appears to play a role in both

chronic

fatigue syndrome (CFS) and fibromyalgia " .

 

It goes on to say that " Tryptophan is the dietary precursor to

serotonin and,

for fibromyalgia, there is some evidence that tryptophan levels are

depressed.

For example, in a study of fibromyalgia patients suffering from

severe pain,

plasma free tryptophan levels were inversely related to the severity

of their

pain. [1] Moreover, when fibromyalgia patients were compared to

normals, plasma

tryptophan levels tended to be lower in the patient group, and their

transport

ratio of tryptophan to the other competing amino acids was

significantly

decreased, suggesting that brain serotonin levels may also be

depressed. [2] "

 

(the references were to

(1.) Moldofsky H, warsh JJ. Plasma tryptophan and musculoskeletal

pain in

non-articular rheumatism ('fibrositis syndrome'). Pain 5(1):65-71,

1978

 

(2.) Yunus MB et al. Plasma tryptophan and other amino acids in

primary

fibromyalgia: a controlled study. J Rheumatol 19(1):90-4, 1992 )

 

I will now indicate other material that speaks to this:

 

Dr. JAMES D. BOWEN, M.D. indicates that consumption of aspartame

will " cause a

reversal of the phenylalnine/tyrosine ratios in the human brain. This

has

profoundly bad implications for the human being, including dopamine

and

serotonin synthesis inhibition, causing depression, appetite changes,

mental

inabilities, increased susceptibility to seizures and a host of

neurohormonal

problems " , in http://nancymarkle.com/drbowen.txt

 

As we can see from the previous article, it is precisely this

inhibition of the

production of serotonin that is the problem; and the culprit, in the

case of

aspartame, is phenylalanine.

 

In the report " Possible Neurologic Effects of Aspartame, a Widely

Used Food

Additive " , by Timothy J. Maher (Department of Pharmacology,

Massachusetts

College of Pharmacy, 179 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115) and

Richard J.

Wurtman (Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts

Institute of

Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139), we read that " phenylalanine can

also diminish

the production of brain catecholamines and serotonin by competing

with their

precursor amino acids for transport across the blood-brain barrier. "

 

So, if we combine this new information concerning the link between the

diminished levels of the chemicals needed by the brain for the

production of

serotonin with the older studies showing that aspartame causes this

problem,

the link, as far as I am concerned, is crystal clear.

 

***************

 

ASPARTAME (NUTRASWEET®) ADDICTION

H. J. Roberts, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.C.C.P.

____________________

Staff, St. Mary's Hospital and Good Samaritan Hospital, West Palm

Beach;, Palm Beach Institute for Medical Research

Address: 6708 Pamela Lane, West Palm Beach, FL 33405

 

SUMMARY

 

The habitual consumption of " diet " products containing the chemical

aspartame not only risks aspartame disease but also clinical

addiction.

Thirty-three (5.6 percent) of 540 aspartame reactors in the author's

recent series found it difficult or impossible to discontinue them

because of severe withdrawal effects. They or their reporting

relatives

(especially parents of afflicted children) specifically used the terms

" addict " and " addiction. " Others who used comparable terms were

excluded even though they experienced similar withdrawal symptoms. The

FDA and members of Congress have been repeatedly urged by me and

thousands of outraged aspartame reactors to declare aspartame products

an " imminent public health hazard, " and remove them from the market.

The

mounting evidence for their causation or aggravation of headache,

seizures, depression, many neurologic disorders (most notably multiple

sclerosis), visual difficulty, allergies, diabetic complications, and

a

host of other conditions - coupled with the potential for addiction -

can be ignored no longer.

 

" The beginning of wisdom is to call things by the right names. "

Chinese Proverb

 

" I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp

of experience. " Patrick Henry (Speech to the Virginia Convention,

1775)

 

Over half the adult population currently consumes products containing

aspartame (NutraSweet®, Equal®). A multibillion-dollar industry

aggressively promotes thousands of items containing this chemical

sweetener that consumers use in prodigious amounts to avoid sugar or

lose weight... even though the latter intent often proves a delusion.

 

I have described many serious side effects and medical/public health

hazards attributable to aspartame products(1-4). The neurologic,

psychologic, eye, endocrine, metabolic and pediatric ravages in my

data

base of over 1,200 aspartame reactors, comprised of both patients and

correspondents, are impressive. Additionally, it is my increasing

conviction that aspartame products can cause, aggravate or accelerate

migraine (5), seizures (6), multiple sclerosis (3), diabetes and its

complications (7), Alzheimer's disease (8,9), and even brain tumors

(10). The clinical and scientific basis for these assertions have been

detailed previously.

 

Unfortunately, another tragic problem has been neglected: addiction to

aspartame products. Persons consuming large amounts not only may

suffer

aspartame disease, but also have difficulty stopping them because of

violent and prolonged withdrawal reactions... the hallmark of

addiction.

Recovered alcoholic patients repeatedly stated that they felt worse

after avoiding aspartame than alcohol, and asserted that they had

traded

one addiction for another. My experience, coupled with more than

10,000

consumers who volunteered their complaints to the Food and Drug

Administration (FDA) and manufacturers, reflects the magnitude of this

widespread unrecognized affliction.

 

In view of the controversial nature and implications of this subject,

clarification of my status at the outset is relevant. I practised many

years as a primary care internist and medical consultant prior to

encountering aspartame disease. I continue to remain corporate neutral

- that is, no grants, monies or other inducements were received from

industry, government or other institutions.

 

DATA

 

This report focuses on 33 persons (5.6 percent) among the most recent

540 aspartame reactors in my series. The terms " addict " or " addiction "

were specifically used either by patients or reporting relatives and

friends - notwithstanding the absence of these words in my 9-page

Aspartame Reaction Questionnaire Survey (3). Persons using other terms

implying addiction (e.g., " severe craving " ) were excluded

notwithstanding the suffering of withdrawal symptoms.

 

Subjects

 

There were 22 females and 11 males. Most were between 25 and 50 at the

time of consultation or correspondence. Four children - ages 2-1/2, 3,

6, and 9-1/2 - were included (see Discussion).

 

The amounts of aspartame products consumed daily ranged up to six

liters

or 12 cans of sodas, 20 or more tabletop packets, and considerable

gum.

A number of persons gave the history of ingesting considerable iced

tea

mixes containing aspartame, especially in hot weather, prior to the

onset of clinical aspartame disease.

 

The manifestations of aspartame disease and the pathos of such

addiction

appear in the case summaries. The withdrawal symptoms (e.g., severe

irritability, tension, depression, tremors, nausea, sweating) usually

abated promptly on resuming aspartame, along with an intense craving

for these products. One woman noted: " This was as bad as when I quit

smoking 13 years ago. " Examples of other pertinent clinical aspects

are

briefly cited.

 

.. As with other addictions, denial and distortion were encountered.

The mother of two young children stated: " I didn't want to believe

aspartame was the cause of my problems. Even though anything with it

made me crave carbohydrates, I dismissed this as my imagination. "

 

.. Several patients experienced severe withdrawal symptoms when they

traveled abroad and were unable to purchase aspartame sodas. On the

possibility these features represented caffeine withdrawal, they tried

drinking more caffeine... but to no avail.

 

.. Some developed severe reactions when they also drank alcohol. One

stated: " My memory would just go completely. "

 

REPRESENTATIVE HISTORIES

 

A. The anguished friend of an aspartame addict stated: " She could

hardly walk. She could hardly see. She was already going to a

neurologist because they thought she had multiple sclerosis. But she

told me not to talk about it even though her physician already told

her

that aspartame was the problem, especially after he started

researching

its role in brain tumors - because two persons in her family died from

brain tumors! When told aspartame would kill her, she said: 'I'm

addicted to it and can't live without it. If they try to take it off

the market, I'll get it on the black market!' "

 

B. The wife of an addicted aspartame reactor wrote: " I've told my

husband over and over again, as have several physicians, that his

problems would probably go away if he got off aspartame. But he says

he

is addicted and can't. " Provoked by her continued purchase of

aspartame

sodas, the daughter-in-law asked whether she would hand him a gun if

he

said he wanted to commit suicide. She responded: " Please don't say

anything else. It's hard enough to watch him lose his memory, fall,

and

hardly be able to walk. I just want to make him happy. "

 

C. A mother stated: " My children are no longer allowed to drink diet

sodas or anything else with aspartame in it. Unfortunately, I am

addicted to it. I will try and wean myself-but boy, oh boy, it's not

going to be easy! "

 

D. A previous alcoholic patient expressed concern that he had traded

alcoholism for aspartame addiction. He observed in a letter: " There

are MANY just like me. You will rarely see a recovered alcoholic

without a drink in hand, day or night, whether it be coffee or soda...

usually DIET. We can hardly keep sweeteners on hand at our meetings.

MANY of us suffer from tremendous mood bouts. If aspartame has

contributed to the difficulties I have had with depression and mood

swings, I WANT TO KNOW! "

 

E. The wife of a man consuming up to six liters of diet cola daily

concluded: " He is truly addicted and unable to help himself... When

not

drinking it, he is like a new person, or at least the person I once

knew. But when he then drinks it after abstaining for a week (as a

result of incredible determination), I see depression, verbal

aggression, a sense of hopelessness, inability to sleep, poor

concentration, trouble with eyesight, chest problems, and weight

gain. "

 

F. A female correspondent with aspartame-related panic attacks and

palpitations wrote: " I heard about this problem and will be taking the

abstinence test. It will be hard because I am addicted to diet cola.

Something has to be done! It seems to me that capitalism is getting in

the way of our lives. "

 

G. A woman with an " addiction to diet cola " refused to admit the

" ridiculous amounts I have been using, even to my husband. I have the

symptom of always being thirsty from aspartame. What do I do? "

 

H. A woman with aspartame disease was misdiagnosed as having multiple

sclerosis. She stated: " I am convinced that aspartame was at the root

of my problem. It is hard to convey just how much of this stuff I was

using. I used at least one large box of aspartame a week... for

myself!

After my husband heard on a radio broadcast that it was bad, he told

me

not to use it, and refused to buy it for me any longer. I then

literally bought it weekly, hid it in the kitchen, and used it when he

was out of the room. And people still don't believe it is

addictive??? "

 

I. An addicted young man with longstanding symptoms he ascribed to

aspartame sodas wrote: " I drank a lot of pop with aspartame when I was

a kid in the 1980s, and felt bad. After reading a page on the net

about

insomnia, being lightheaded, having ringing in the ears, and feeling

unreal 'like I was on something,' I stopped. But it's hard to make

yourself stop. It took about two months before I felt better. I think

most people who drink diet pop get addicted to it... like me. At first

you don't seem to like the taste; then you crave it. "

 

J. A 28-year-old woman previously drank as much as two liters of an

aspartame cola daily. She stated: " I was 'addicted' to it, and

suffered terrible muscle spasms, vertigo, dizziness, nausea,

depression,

slurred speech, etc. I stumbled across an article about the dangers of

aspartame, and was absolutely horrified. Within seven days after

stopping, most of these symptoms disappeared. I have had no

recurrences

to date. "

 

K. A hospital pharmacist with considerable knowledge about addictive

substances and drug abuse wrote: " I have been a chronic user of diet

drinks for years, and always joked that I was 'addicted' to aspartame.

Recently, I decided to stop them, but I can't do it no matter how

hard I

try. When I'm not drinking these drinks, the people I work with and my

family have all commented that I act as if I'm going through heroin

withdrawal. I also experience many problems while drinking them, the

most profound of which is joint pain " (see 11).

 

L. The mother of an aspartame addict gave a poignant followup of her

daughter's case, which I described previously (1, p. 98), when her

addiction recurred. She had been incapacitated with aspartame disease

as a 23-year-old student. In her own words, " My epileptic-type

seizures, and drastic personality and intellectual changes were so

severe as to end my marriage, nearly ruin my academic standing, and

caused me to lose my job. " After stopping her excessive consumption of

aspartame sodas, she evidenced clinical normalization, and then

bought a

beautiful home. The mother described her subsequent relapse.

 

" About eight months ago, unknown to me, she began drinking

considerable diet soda. I learned a few days ago that she started

drinking alcohol, plans to leave her fiance, and bought a motorcycle

- exactly as she had done 12 years previously when drinking diet

soda. Her aspartame addiction makes her totally irrational. She

crusaded against aspartame for 12 years, and is now drinking it.

I don't know where to go for help, especially because most

doctors I know think aspartame is just wonderful! "

 

M. A woman wrote: " I am probably one of the many 'aspartame addicts'

you have come in contact with. I have had a terrible diet cola habit

of

drinking at least a 12-pack/day for many years. I would love to change

because I believe my particular ailments could be related to

aspartame.

Where do I go from here? Please help!! "

 

N. The brother of a " recovered aspartame addict " related the details

of

his sibling's case to a neighbor who was beginning to drink excessive

amounts of diet sodas. He stated: " I am hoping that he doesn't face

severe withdrawal the way my brother did. After 5 or 6 bad bouts of

withdrawal, he was finally able to kick the habit. "

 

O. An aspartame reactor invited her neighbors to a block party aimed

at

urging them to avoid aspartame which would not be on the premises. A

" very addicted " woman with severe dermatitis and fatigue had tried to

do

so previously at the urging of her daughter, but resumed diet cola in

two weeks. She went to the block party with a can hidden under her

jacket... but was promptly spotted. She confessed: " I'm sorry, I just

can't break the addiction. I can't get off of it! "

 

P. A 36-year-old computer programmer experienced many symptoms

attributable to aspartame disease after he began using " a line of

products containing aspartame. " He would ingest as much as three or

four quarts of an instant iced tea in several flavors on weekend

afternoons during the summer. Nearly one month of abstinence was

required before his symptoms abated.

 

Q. A 47-year-old female sought consultation by the author for

increasingly severe problems over the previous 1-1/2 years, during

which

time she consumed large amounts of aspartame. She began the day by

drinking three cups of coffee to each of which an aspartame tabletop

sweetener was added. She then ingested 10-12 glasses or cups of

aspartame-sweetened beverages, and ate considerable amounts of

aspartame

puddings.

 

This patient gave a history of alcoholism and excessive amphetamine

use

decades earlier. (Amphetamines had been taken for extreme fatigue and

weight reduction.) She joined Alcoholics Anonymous 20 years

previously.

She was now happily married, and had taken only a single social drink

in

five years.

 

Her main concern was increasing confusion and memory loss over the

past

year -- especially because she prided herself on a " photographic

memory. " During this time, she also suffered severe headaches ( " never

a

problem before " ), hearing difficulty ( " as if my ears were covered " ),

" lightheadedness with staggering, " vertigo on lying down ( " the room

was

actually spinning " ), attacks of severe nervousness and agitation,

intense hunger, a craving for sugar and sweets, intense muscle cramps,

pains in the legs and thighs, aching and stiffness of various joints,

marked intolerance to cold, and elevation of her blood pressure (noted

for the first time). Dryness of the eyes became so bothersome that she

required one bottle of artificial tears a week.

 

Another distressing symptom was severe depression. The patient

considered committing suicide on several occasions. She had the good

fortune of belonging to a circle of caring friends who thwarted such

an

action.

 

The family history was also pertinent. Both parents had been

alcoholics. Her mother was " a potential diabetic, " and her nephew a

juvenile diabetic.

 

After learning of the possible cause or aggravation of similar

problems

in other persons from aspartame, she promptly stopped all such

products.

She emphasized, however, that the ensuing " withdrawal symptoms " were

far

worse than those experienced after discontinuing alcohol or

amphetamines. On a regimen of an appropriate diet, supportive measures

and continued aspartame avoidance, her symptoms improved. She no

longer

needed the artificial tears. An entire subsequent visit was devoted to

discussing her lifelong " fear of fat " that had initiated the use of

aspartame products.

 

DISCUSSION

 

Addiction to aspartame products is as real as abuse of tobacco,

alcohol

and drugs. The foregoing experience of a single alerted physician

attests to this clinical phenomenon. In effect, the United States has

been the innocent victim of regulatory shortcomings related to the

initial and continued approval of aspartame products.

 

To my knowledge, this is the first report that addresses aspartame

addiction. I have challenged colleagues to cite comparable instances

of gross denial in contemporary medicine concerning widely used drugs

or

chemicals classified " Generally Recognized As Safe " (GRAS). (Aspartame

was developed initially as a drug to treat peptic ulcer.) Moreover, I

have repeatedly asserted that aspartame should not have been approved

for human use in view of the high incidence of brain and other tumors

found in animal studies, and the absence of long-term trials in humans

using " real world " products exposed to prolonged storage and heat.

 

The plight of aspartame addicts has been compounded by (a)

footdragging

of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) despite its own data base

(12,

13), (b) the brainwashing of health professionals (especially doctors

and dieticians) from constant reiteration by pro-industry advocates

that

aspartame disease does not exist, and © the refusal of some

addictionologists even to consider this issue. The thousands of

complaints volunteered to the FDA, along with my independent data on

over 1,200 aspartame reactors, indicate the gravity of such

disinformation.

 

Exclusion of Related Terminology

 

This report clearly underestimates the prevalence of aspartame

addiction. I purposely excluded aspartame reactors who continued to

consume large amounts despite debilitating symptoms because they used

expressions other than " addict " and " addiction. " Some examples:

 

.. Many aspartame reactors described their " unnatural craving " for

aspartame products. It was not limited to diet sodas - e.g., a woman

with a severe " craving " for aspartame chewing gum, especially after

meals. In fact, the habitual chewing of such gum poses a unique great

threat (see below).

 

.. " Recovered alcoholics, " and former smokers and substance abusers

tended to use considerable amounts of aspartame products. One chain

smoker averred that he became a " chain drinker " of diet sodas in this

switch of addictions.

 

.. An aspartame reactor referred to herself as " a 10-year-plus

aspartame

junkie. " Another stated she had been " a diet colaholic for 12 years. "

 

.. Three women indicated that each was " hooked " on diet sodas for over

a

decade.

 

This correspondence from a 29-year-old woman with severe aspartame

disease, who was referred by her physician to confirm the diagnosis,

bridges the terminology of " addiction " and " craving. "

 

" As I do not use any sugar, I have used aspartame and saccharin.

The disturbing phenomenon is that I now have intense and

abnormal cravings for aspartame, and find myself using more and

more of it... like an addictive cycle. Without it, food seems flat.

I have tried eliminating it altogether, and find that this actually

intensifies the cravings even a week later! I would like to know

if you have ever heard of anything like this before, or have advice

as to dealing with it. Besides the aspartame cravings, I have also

continued to have inexplicable bouts of itchy skin, hives, and quite

a bit of swelling in the face and legs. The legs are often numb, and

I am extremely fatigued most of the time. "

 

The enormous consumption of aspartame products by these individuals

also could be considered as part of their addiction.

 

.. A 54-year-old woman was phoned by her daughter who had just learned

about aspartame disease. " When I called her with the information, she

had already taken 15 aspartame packets. Mother told me this was usual

for her since the product came on the market. "

 

.. One " huge consumer of aspartame " conjectured that such sodas are

ideal for addiction because " they first quench thirst, and then cause

thirst. " His side effects of dry mouth and dry eyes are experienced by

many aspartame reactors (2-4, 14), even in the absence of marked

sweating or hot weather.

 

The Female Preponderance

 

Female aspartame reactors consistently outnumbered men in prior

analyses of both my data (2,3) and that of the FDA (12, 13). Some of

the metabolic and endocrine factors that may contribute to this gender

vulnerability have been discussed (2,3,8).

 

More women are trying to avoid aspartame during pregnancy on the

advice

of peers, chiefly out of concern for fetal harm (1-3). Obstetricians

increasingly concur, albeit partly to avoid medicolegal situations

predicated on the absence of informed consent. Unfortunately, some

pregnant women in this series resumed aspartame products,

notwithstanding their great misgivings, after experiencing severe

withdrawal symptoms during attempted abstinence.

 

A 27-year-old woman with an " addiction " to aspartame products,

especially a popular lemonade, suffered headache, irritability and

dizziness. Attempting to become pregnant, she stated: " It will be the

hardest to let go. "

 

Children

 

The apparent addiction of four children was disconcerting. Their case

histories warrant summary.

 

.. A 9-1/2-year old boy exhibited " extreme hyperactivity. " Every time

he opened the refrigerator and found only regular cola sodas, he would

exclaim: " I can't believe they didn't get even one diet cola! "

 

.. A 2-1/2-year-old girl had been weaned off baby fruit juices and

begun

on aspartame drinks to prevent sugar-induced dental problems. She

developed an extensive rash that subsided after stopping aspartame.

Her

mother wrote: " For the first five days, she was like someone in

withdrawal - aggressive and craving the substance. "

 

.. A 6-year-old girl was diagnosed by a pediatric neurologist as having

attention deficit disorder and a " mild encephalopathy of unknown

origin. " Her mother drank an aspartame beverage during the pregnancy

because of marked morning sickness and a severe yeast infection. She

wrote: " Little did I realize what I was doing to myself, let alone my

fetus who also developed the yeast infection. By the time she was

three

years old, we were both using sugar-free products - including yogurt,

popsicles, gum, soda pop, candy, ice cream, pies, puddings and hot

chocolate. (She also sneaked them in.) I developed a brain tumor

(oligodendroglioma), and underwent surgery and radiation. Fortunately,

my mom came across two articles on aspartame a year ago, after which

we

quit these products. "

 

.. A 3-year-old girl repeatedly developed a rash and behavior problems

after taking aspartame products. Her mother stated: " For at least five

days after stopping them, she craved the former drink, and was

extremely

hyperactive and aggressive. "

 

Comments on Addiction

 

The continued heavy consumption of aspartame in these reactors

qualifies as " substance abuse " relative to causing, aggravating or

prolonging their physical, mental and behavioral disorders.

As with other forms of chemical dependency, aspartame abusers are

likely

to deny or distort symptoms. The assertion that the addiction solely

represents caffeinism is erroneous.

 

Health professionals and other groups recognize the numerous

psychologic, sociologic, economic, medical and environmental

complexities of substance abuse and addictive behavior. Unlike the

well-known addiction to alcohol, tobacco and drugs, aspartame products

continue to be marketed aggressively to uninformed consumers by a

multibillion dollar industry. Most regard this " supplement " as safe

because of its approval by the FDA. They include pregnant women, the

fetus, young children, and patients with many diseases who are highly

vulnerable to the ravages of this potent neurotoxin. Anthropologists

could equate the matter with " our intoxicated destiny " (15).

 

In his classic description of " addictive eating and drinking, "

Randolph

(16) also emphasized that small quantities of a specific excitant can

perpetuate an addiction response owing to the extreme degrees of

specific sensitivity commonly involved. He included various sugars,

alcoholic beverages and monosodium glutamate (MSG).

 

Consumer Pleas For Help and Outrage

 

As noted in the case summaries, aspartame addicts have pleaded for

help

because of their suffering. Some additional examples:

 

.. A 39-year-old mother wrote: " How in the world do you get off

aspartame? I've wanted to get off of the stuff for years. "

 

.. A 40-year-old receptionist had consumed 4-6 cans of a caffeine-free

diet cola plus two large diet colas with caffeine daily since their

introduction. Every time she tried to stop, she experienced " terrible "

withdrawal anxiety - with associated exhaustion, dizziness,

palpitations, and presumed hypoglycemia attacks. She summarized her

dilemma: " I just can't seem to get off the treadmill! "

 

The outrage of these aspartame victims has been intense (3,4). Indeed,

it generated several groups of consumer activists.

 

.. A 28-year-old mother concisely expressed her anger: " In a sentence,

I could say that aspartame effectively ruined my physical and

emotional

health for the better part of ten years. "

 

.. A 28-year-old Australian woman " addicted " to diet cola wrote: " It is

an absolute crime that this substance has been offered to an

unsuspecting and ill-informed public. It must be stopped! "

 

.. A male aspartame reactor reflected: " I guess it IS going to take a

bloody epidemic of blindness, diabetes and multiple sclerosis to get

this poison off the market. "

 

.. A 43-year-old woman with multiple aspartame reactions - notably

joint

pain, loss of hair, severe fatigue, aggravated hypoglycemia,

allergies,

and mouth lesions - expressed extreme concern " about this unnerving

'addiction' to aspartame. "

 

Each of the three components of aspartame -- phenylalanine (50%),

aspartic acid (40%), and the methyl ester (10%) that promptly becomes

free methyl alcohol (methanol) after ingestion - and their multiple

breakdown products following exposure to heat or during storage are

potentially neurotoxic and addictive (1 - 4). (They also have been

invoked relative to the allergenicity and carcinogenicity of aspartame

and its metabolities.) Some of the mechanisms may involve dopamine,

cerebral cholecystokinin (CCK), serotonin, endorphins, other important

neurotransmitters, insulin, and the unique permeability of the blood-

brain barrier to phenylalanine.

 

The transformation of phenylalanine to dopamine and dopamine

metabolites

assumes relevance in addictive states. Addictive drugs flood synapses

with dopamine, which carries a " pleasure message " from one nerve cell

to

another in the " reward pathway " ... thereby creating a " high. " For

instance, cocaine blocks the reuptake of dopamine, thereby acting as

an

indirect dopamine agonist. Such repeated rushes can result in

desensitization of the brain to dopamine.

 

.. During et al (17) demonstrated that changes in brain phenylalanine

may selectively affect production of the dopamine molecule that

becomes

preferentially released into synapses.

 

.. Myers and Melchior (18) found that a dopamine-dopaldehyde

condensation product (tetrahydropapaveroline) caused rats to drink

increasingly large amounts of alcohol solutions which they normally

reject.

 

.. Researchers have advanced the concepts that increased dopamine

influences the addiction effects of cocaine; and that dopamine-

receptor

agonists themselves might be addictive in cocaine users (19).

 

The habitual chewing of aspartame gum poses a unique threat, as

evidenced by the dramatic development of generalized symptoms in some

aspartame reactors. Its flavor and sweetness can last 30 minutes,

compared to about five minutes for sugar-sweetened gum. The chemical

may be absorbed through the mucosa of the mouth (as used

therapeutically

with nitroglycerin), and via simple diffusion from the oropharynx

directly into the brain. The latter phenomenon has been demonstrated

with small molecules such as glucose, sodium chloride and ethyl

alcohol

(20).

 

The Methanol Issue

 

The chronic intake of free methanol in significant amounts is highly

germane to aspartame disease and addiction, particularly for

alcoholics.

Six years before FDA approval of aspartame, Dr. Herbert S. Posner (21)

of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences wrote a

review titled, " Biohazards of Methanol in Proposed New Uses. " He

stressed the failure to recognize the " delayed and irreversible

effects

on the nervous system " of methanol... at widely varying levels of

exposure and at rather low levels. " Furthermore, he suggested " ...when

a safer compound is available, methanol should not be utilized. "

 

The daily intake of methyl alcohol from natural sources averages less

than 10 mg (22). Aspartame beverages contain 55 mg methanol per liter,

and nearly double as much in some carbonated orange sodas. Persons

ingesting five liters a day can therefore consume over 400 mg

methanol.

These facts are pertinent:

 

.. Methyl alcohol is probably the first component of aspartame released

within the small intestine, and rapidly absorbed. Blood and methanol

concentrations correlate with aspartame intake. " Abuse doses " (100

mg/kg or more) ingested by normal subjects significantly elevate blood

methanol concentrations, remaining detectable for eight or more hours

(23).

 

.. Humans are more vulnerable to the toxic effects of methanol than

animals because several enzymes required for its metabolism have been

lost during evolution.

 

.. The toxicity of methanol is enhanced by its slow rate of oxidation -

only one-seventh that of ethyl alcohol - occurring chiefly in the

liver

and kidneys. Even though the half life in human volunteers ingesting

small amounts (1-5 ml) is about three hours, complete oxidation to

carbon dioxide usually requires several days.

 

.. The body attempts to detoxify methyl alcohol by oxidizing it to

formaldehyde (a deadly neurotoxin and Class A carcinogen), and then to

formate or formic acid within minutes. Formate and formaldehyde each

may

contribute to toxicity and nervous system/immune dysfunction through

various mechanisms. One is the conjugation of formaldehyde with human

serum albumin (F-HSA) to form a new antigenic determinant. Patients

with multiple health complaints who had been exposed chronically to

formaldehyde develop anti F-HSA antibodies and elevated Tal cells

(antigen memory cells), consistent with sustained antigenic

stimulation

of the immune system (24).

 

.. Concerning the methyl alcohol component of aspartame, Hugh C.

Cannon,

Associate Commissioner for Legislative Affairs of the FDA, wrote in a

letter dated September 8, 1986: " The Agency has recently become aware,

however, of clinical data that indicate that the toxic effects of

methanol are due to formate accumulation and not to formaldehyde or

methanol itself. Formate is the oxidation product of formaldehyde

which

is itself formed from the metabolism of methanol. "

 

The eye manifestations experienced by one-fourth of aspartame reactors

(1 - 4) are probably at least partly due to methanol and its breakdown

products. It is of interest that several persons had severe visual

deterioration diagnosed as toxic amblyopia (including transient

blindness diagnosed as optic neuritis) on different occasions

following

the excessive intake of either aspartame or alcohol.

 

Responsibility of the Health Professions

 

The medical profession must pursue this concern in conjunction with

consumer advocates, elected officials and regulatory agencies. Such a

commitment also extends to challenging the safety of proposed

sweeteners

being developed by food technologists, some up to 10,000 times sweeter

than sucrose. My objection to the petition for approval of Neotame

(25)

provides a case in point.

 

Health professionals must protest the unbridled consumption of " diet "

sodas and other aspartame products by children. The potential

consequences include interference with brain development, abnormal

behavior, cognitive problems, depression, seizures, headache, allergic

disorders (asthma; severe eruptions), gastrointestinal complaints,

anorexia with marked weight loss, and cross-sensitization to other

chemicals such as monosodium glutamate (26). The use of aspartame-

sweetened foods and beverages by young children, especially those

with a

morbid obsession about weight gain and obesity, incurs another risk: a

life-long preference for sugars and sweets.

 

.. A number of concerned teacher-correspondents attributed the

increased

frequency of attention deficit disorders and decline in school grades

to

the consumption of aspartame products. In my opinion, several prior

industry-sponsored studies that concluded neither sugar (sucrose) nor

aspartame affect children's behavior and cognitive performance (27)

are

misleading because of the nature of their protocols.

 

.. Neuropsychiatric reactions to aspartame candy and gum in children

occurred within a unique social context: their consumption of

Halloween

gifts from thoughtful neighbors concerned about giving them

conventional

candy. The most frequent were headache, vomiting and tremors.

 

.. Most physicians do not realize the aspartame content of many over-

the-counter and prescription drugs and vitamin products intended for

use

by young children. They include tasty suspensions, and chewable

tablets

of antibiotics or analgesics.

 

ALL pregnant women and nursing mothers should avoid aspartame products

(28). In addition to risking addiction, the reasons include:

 

.. Exposure of the fetus to considerable phenylalanine, aspartic acid,

and free methyl alcohol

 

.. Maternal malnutrition associated with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and

reduced caloric intake

 

.. The transmission of aspartame and its components via the mother's

milk

 

.. Increasing the " allergic load " ... thereby risking future

hypersensitivity diseases

 

The FDA and elected officials have been warned repeatedly about the

potentially disastrous effects of aspartame consumption by pregnant

women and young children... but to little avail. Indeed, the FDA

disregards its own data (12, 13). Alfred North Whitehead aptly

asserted: " Where attainable knowledge could have changed the issue,

ignorance has the guilt of vice. "

 

REFERENCES

 

1. Roberts HJ. The Aspartame Problem. Statement for Committee on

Labor and Human Resources, U.S. Senate Hearing on " NutraSweet " -Health

and Safety Concerns, November 3, 1987. 83-178, U.S. Government

Printing

office, Washington, 1988:466-467.

 

2. Roberts HJ. Reactions attributed to aspartame-containing products:

551 cases. J Appl Nutr 1988; 40:85-94.

 

3. Roberts HJ. Aspartame (NutraSweet®): Is It Safe? Philadelphia, The

Charles Press, 1989.

 

4. Roberts HJ. Sweet'ner Dearest: Bittersweet Vignettes About

Aspartame (NutraSweet®). West Palm Beach, Sunshine Sentinel Press,

1992.

 

5. Roberts HJ. Aspartame and headache. Neurology 1995; 45:1631-1633.

 

6. Roberts HJ. Aspartame (NutraSweet®)-associated epilepsy. Clin Res

1988; 36:349A.

 

7. Roberts HJ. Complications associated with aspartame (NutraSweet®)

in diabetics. Clin Res 1988; 3:489A.

 

8. Roberts HJ. Defense Against Alzheimer's Disease: A Rational

Blueprint for Prevention. West Palm Beach, Sunshine Sentinel Press,

1995.

 

9. Roberts HJ. Preclinical Alzheimer's disease (Letter) Neurology

1997; 48:549-550.

 

10. Roberts HJ. Does aspartame cause human brain cancer? J Adv M

1991;4 (Winter):231- 241.

 

11. Roberts HJ. Joint pain associated with aspartame use. Townsend

Letter for Doctors 1991; May:375-376.

 

12. Tollefson L, Barnard RJ, Glinsmann WH. Monitoring of adverse

reactions to aspartame reported to the U.S. Food and Drug

Administration. In Proceedings of the First International Meeting on

Dietary Phenylalanine and Brain Function, ed by RJ Wurtman and E

Ritter-

Walker, Washington, D.C., May 8-10, 1987, 347-372.

 

13. Department of Health & Human Services: Summary of adverse

reactions attributed to aspartame. April 20, 1995.

 

14. Roberts HJ. Aspartame-associated dry mouth (xerostomia). Townsend

Letter for Doctors 1993; February:201-202.

 

15. Rudgley R. The Alchemy of Culture: Intoxicants in Society.

London, British Museum Press, 1998.

 

16. Randolph, TG. The descriptive features of food addiction:

addictive eating and drinking. Quart J Studies Alcohol 1956; 17:198-

224.

 

17. During NJ, Acworth IN, Wurtman RJ. An in vivo study of dopamine

release in striatum: The effects of phenylalanine. In Proceedings of

the First International Meeting on Dietary Phenylalanine and Brain

Function. ed by RJ Wurtman and E Ritter-Walker, Washington, D.C., May

8-10, 1987.

 

18. Myers RD, Melchior CL. Alcohol drinking: Abnormal intake caused by

tetrahydropapaveroline in brain. Science 1977; f196:554-555.

 

19. Koob G. Cited by The Lancet 1998; 352:1290.

 

20. Maller O, Kare MR, Welt M, Bohrman H. Movement of glucose and

sodium chlorine from the oropharyngeal cavity to the brain. Nature

1967; 213:713.

 

21. Posner HS. Biohazards of methanol in proposed new uses. J Toxic

Envir Health 1975; 1:153-171.

 

22. Monte WC. Aspartame: Methyl alcohol and the public health. J Appl

Nutr 1984; 36:42-54.

 

23. Stegink ID, Filer LJ Jr. Aspartame: Physiology and Biochemistry.

New York, Marcel Dekker, Inc. 1984.

 

24. Thrasher JF, Broughton A, Micevich P. Antibodies and immune

profiles of individuals occupationally exposed to formaldehyde. Six

case reports. Am J Indust M 1988; 14:479-488.

 

25. Roberts HJ. Submission to FDA regarding Docket No. 981F-0052 (Food

Additive Petition for Neotame), March 3, 1988.

 

26. Roberts HJ. Testimony: Analysis of Adverse Reactions to Monosodium

Glutamate. Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology,

Bethesda, April 8, 1993.

 

27. Wolraich ML, Lindgren SD, Stumbo PJ, et al. Effects of diets high

in sucrose or aspartame on the behavior and cognitive performance of

children. N Engl J Med 1994; 330:301-307.

 

28. Roberts HJ. Aspartame effects during pregnancy and childhood.

(Letter) Latitudes 1997; 3 (Number 1): 3.

 

Courtesy of Dr. Roberts and

The " Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients " ,

(http://www.tldp.com/)

January, 2000 (pp. 52-57)***********************

Hi,

 

I would like to take the opportunity to invite you to join our

Aspartame

Victims Support Group, an e-mail community hosted by Groups. We

have

nearly 700 members, and I believe that we are the largest single

group of

aspartame activists in the world. Our members are all aspartame

victims who

have made a commitment to sharing the knowledge we have with others

in the

hopes that we can save lives. We would very much appreciate your

participation.

 

If you would like to join, just log on to http://presidiotex.com/join

where

there is a window for entering your e-mail address and signing up.

 

Thank you very much for your interest in our cause.

 

Bryant Holman

Aspartame Victims Support Group

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