You
are visiting
www.rawfoodinfo.com
Aspartame:
What You Dont Know Can Hurt You
If a
product is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and composed of
natural ingredients, would you assume it is safe to consume?
If the same product is an artificial sweetener, would you assume it helps control
your weight? Millions of people use aspartame, the artificial sweetener known
as NutraSweet, with these assumptions in mind.
Aspartame can be
found in thousands of products such as:
* instant breakfasts
* breath mints
* cereals
* sugar-free chewing gum
* cocoa mixes
* coffee beverages
* frozen desserts
* gelatin desserts
* juice beverages
* laxatives
* multivitamins
* milk drinks
* pharmaceuticals and supplements, including over-the-counter medicines
* shake mixes
* soft drinks
* tabletop sweeteners
* tea beverages
* instant teas and coffees
* topping mixes
* wine coolers
* yogurt
However, aspartame's
tainted history of approval and potentially toxic ingredients cast serious doubt
on the safety of this sugar substitute. Furthermore, aspartame may actually
increase your appetite (Farber 52).
While the FDA approval may signal the green light for safe consumption, 85 percent
of all complaints registered with the FDA are for adverse reactions to aspartame,
including five reported deaths. A closer look at the unscientific studies, suspicious
approval methods, and its harmful ingredients, reveal the hidden dangers of
this artificial sweetener. In reality, aspartame poses a public health threat.
Ailments Resulting
From Aspartame
The components of aspartame can lead to a wide variety of ailments. Some of
these problems occur gradually while others are
immediate, acute reactions.
A few of the many disorders associated with aspartame include the following:
* Birth Defects
A study funded by Monsanto to study possible birth defects caused by consuming aspartame was cut off after preliminary data showed damaging information about aspartame. Additionally, in the book, While Waiting: A Prenatal Guidebook, it is stated that aspartame is suspected of causing brain damage in sensitive individuals. A fetus may be at risk for these effects. Some researchers have suggested that high doses of aspartame may be associated with problems ranging from dizziness and subtle brain changes to mental retardation.
* Cancer (Brain Cancer)
In 1981, an FDA statistician
stated that the brain tumor data on aspartame was so "worrisome" that
he could not recommend approval of NutraSweet.(14)
In a two-year study conducted by the manufacturer of aspartame, twelve of 320
rats fed a normal diet and aspartame developed brain tumors while none of the
control rats developed tumors, and five of the twelve tumors were in rats given
a low dose of aspartame.(15)
The approval of aspartame was a violation of the Delaney Amendment, which was
supposed to prevent cancer-causing substances such as methanol (formaldehye)
and DKP from entering our food supply. A late FDA toxicologist testified before
the U.S. Congress that aspartame was capable of producing brain tumors. This
made it illegal for the FDA to set an allowable daily intake at any level. He
stated in his testimony that Searle's studies were "to a large extent unreliable"
and that "at least one of those studies has established beyond any reasonable
doubt that aspartame is capable of inducing brain tumors in experimental animals
... " He concluded his testimony by asking, "What is the reason for
the apparent refusal by the FDA to invoke for this food additive the so-called
Delaney Amendment to the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act? ... And if the FDA itself
elects to violate the law, who is left to protect the health of the public?"(16)
In the mid-1970s it was discovered that the manufacturer of aspartame falsified
studies in several ways. One of the techniques used was to cut tumors out of
test animals and put them back in the study. Another technique used to falsify
the studies was to list animals that had actually died as surviving the study.
Thus, the data on brain tumors was likely worse than discussed above. In addition,
a former employee of the manufacturer of aspartame told the FDA on July 13,
1977 that the particles of DKP were so large that the rats could discriminate
between the DKP and their normal diet.(12)
* Diabetes
The American Diabetes
Association (ADA) is actually recommending this chemical poison to persons with
diabetes, but according to research conducted by a diabetes specialist, aspartame:
1) Leads to the precipitation of clinical diabetes.
2) Causes poorer diabetic control in diabetics on insulin or oral drugs.
3) Leads to the aggravation of diabetic complications such as retinopathy, cataracts,
neuropathy and gastroparesis.
4) Causes convulsions.
In a statement concerning the use of products containing aspartame by persons
with diabetes and hypoglycemia, the researcher says:
"Unfortunately, many patients in my practice, and others seen in consultation,
developed serious metabolic, neurologic and other complications that could be
specifically attributed to using aspartame products. This was evidenced by the
loss of diabetic control, the intensification of hypoglycemia, the occurrence
of presumed 'insulin reactions' (including convulsions) that proved to be aspartame
reactions, and the precipitation, aggravation or simulation of diabetic complications
(especially impaired vision and neuropathy) while using these products ... Dramatic
improvement of such features after avoiding aspartame, and the prompt predictable
recurrence of these problems when the patient resumed aspartame products, knowingly
or inadvertently."
Another researcher stated that excitotoxins such as those found in aspartame
can precipitate diabetes in persons who are genetically susceptible to the disease.(5)
* Emotional Disorders
In a double blind study of the effects of aspartame on persons with mood disorders, findings showed a large increase in serious symptoms for persons taking aspartame. Since some of the symptoms were so serious, the Institutional Review Board had to stop the study. Three of the participants had said that they had been "poisoned" by aspartame. Researchers concluded that "individuals with mood disorders are particularly sensitive to this artificial sweetener; its use in this population should be discouraged."(18)
One researcher stated
about aspartame, "I know it causes seizures. I'm convinced also that it
definitely causes behavioral changes. I'm very angry that this substance is
on the market. I personally question the reliability and validity of any studies
funded by the NutraSweet Company."(19)
Additionally, there are numerous reported cases of low brain serotonin levels,
depression and other emotional disorders that have been linked to aspartame
and often are relieved by stopping the intake of aspartame.
* Epilepsy/Seizures
With the large and
growing number of seizures caused by aspartame, it is sad to see that the Epilepsy
Foundation is promoting the "safety" of aspartame. At Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, 80 people who had suffered seizures after ingesting
aspartame were surveyed. Community Nutrition Institute concluded the following
about the survey:
"These 80 cases meet the FDA's own definition of an imminent hazard to
the public health, which requires the FDA to expeditiously remove a product
from the market."
Both the Air Force's magazine, Flying Safety, and the Navy's magazine, Navy
Physiology, published articles warning about the many dangers of aspartame including
the cumulative delirious effects of methanol and the greater likelihood of birth
defects. The articles note that the ingestion of aspartame can make pilots more
susceptible to seizures and vertigo. Twenty articles sounding warnings about
ingesting aspartame while flying have also appeared in the National Business
Aircraft Association Digest (NBAA Digest 1993), Aviation Medical Bulletin (1988),
The Aviation Consumer (1988), Canadian General Aviation News (1990), Pacific
Flyer (1988), General Aviation News (1989), Aviation Safety Digest (1989), and
Plane & Pilot (1990) and a paper warning about aspartame was presented at
the 57th Annual Meeting of the Aerospace Medical Association (Gaffney 1986).
A hotline was even set up for pilots suffering from acute reactions to aspartame
ingestion. Over 600 pilots have reported symptoms including some who have reported
suffering grand mal seizures in the cockpit due to aspartame.(21) Why don't
we hear about these things?
The reason many people do not hear about serious reactions to aspartame is twofold:
1) Lack of awareness by the general population. Aspartame-caused diseases are
not reported in the newspapers like plane crashes. This is because these incidents
occur one at a time in thousands of different locations across the United States.
2) Most people do not associate their symptoms with the long-term use of aspartame.
For the people who have killed a significant percentage of their brain cells
and thereby caused a chronic illness, there is no way that they would normally
associate such an illness with aspartame consumption.
How aspartame was approved is a lesson in how chemical and pharmaceutical companies
can manipulate government agencies such as the FDA, "bribe" organizations
such as the American Dietetic Association, and flood the scientific community
with flawed and fraudulent industry-sponsored studies funded by the makers of
aspartame.
Erik Millstone, a researcher at the Science Policy Research Unit of Sussex University
has compiled thousands of pages of evidence, some of which have been obtained
using the Freedom of Information Act 23, showing:
1. Laboratory tests
were faked and dangers were concealed.
2. Tumors were removed from animals and animals that had died were "restored
to life" in laboratory records.
3. False and misleading statements were made to the FDA.
4. The two US Attorneys given the task of bringing fraud charges against the
aspartame manufacturer took positions with the manufacturer's law firm, letting
the statute of limitations run out.
5. The Commissioner of the FDA overruled the objections of the FDA's own scientific
board of inquiry. Shortly after that decision, he took a position with Burson-Marsteller,
the firm in charge of public relations for G.D. Searle.
A Public Board of Inquiry (PBOI) was conducted in 1980. There were three scientists
who reviewed the objections of Olney and Turner to the approval of aspartame.
They voted unanimously against aspartame's approval. The FDA Commissioner, Dr
Arthur Hull Hayes, Jr. then created a 5-person Scientific Commission to review
the PBOI findings. After it became clear that the Commission would uphold the
PBOI's decision by a vote of 3 to 2, another person was added to the Commission,
creating a deadlocked vote. This allowed the FDA Commissioner to break the deadlock
and approve aspartame for dry goods in 1981. Dr Jacqueline Verrett, the Senior
Scientist in an FDA Bureau of Foods review team created in August 1977 to review
the Bressler Report (a report that detailed G.D. Searle's abuses during the
pre-approval testing) said: "It was pretty obvious that somewhere along
the line, the bureau officials were working up to a whitewash." In 1987,
Verrett testified before the US Senate stating that the experiments conducted
by Searle were a "disaster." She stated that her team was instructed
not to comment on or be concerned with the overall validity of the studies.
She stated that questions about birth defects have not been answered. She continued
her testimony by discussing the fact that DKP has been shown to increase uterine
polyps and change blood cholesterol and that increasing the temperature of the
product leads to an increase in production of DKP.(13)
Revolving Doors
The FDA and the manufacturers of aspartame have had a revolving door of employment
for many years. In addition to the FDA Commissioner and two US Attorneys leaving
to take positions with companies connected with G.D. Searle, four other FDA
officials connected with the approval of aspartame took positions connected
with the NutraSweet industry between 1979 and 1982 including the Deputy FDA
Commissioner, the Special Assistant to the FDA Commissioner, the Associate Director
of the Bureau of Foods and Toxicology and the Attorney involved with the Public
Board of Inquiry.(24)
It is important to realize that this type of revolving-door activity has been
going on for decades. The Townsend Letter for Doctors (11/92) reported on a
study revealing that 37 of 49 top FDA officials who left the FDA took positions
with companies they had regulated. They also reported that over 150 FDA officials
owned stock in drug companies they were assigned to manage. Many organizations
and universities receive large sums of money from companies connected to the
NutraSweet Association, a group of companies promoting the use of aspartame.
In January 1993, the American Dietetic Association received a US$75,000 grant
from the NutraSweet Company. The American Dietetic Association has stated that
the NutraSweet Company writes their "Facts" sheets.(25)
What is the FDA doing to protect the consumer from the dangers of aspartame?
Less than nothing.
In 1992, the FDA approved aspartame for use in malt beverages, breakfast cereals,
and refrigerated puddings and fillings. In 1993 the FDA approved aspartame for
use in hard and soft candies, non-alcoholic favored beverages, tea beverages,
fruit juices and concentrates, baked goods and baking mixes, and frostings,
toppings and fillings for baked goods.
In 1991, the FDA banned the importation of stevia. The powder of this leaf has
been used for hundreds of years as an alternative sweetener. It is used widely
in Japan with no adverse effects. Scientists involved in reviewing stevia have
declared it to be safe for human consumption--something that has been well known
in many parts of the world where it is not banned. Some people believe that
stevia was banned to keep the product from taking hold in the United States
and cutting into sales of aspartame.(26)
What is the U.S. Congress doing to protect the consumer from the dangers of
aspartame?
Nothing.
What is the U.S. Administration (President) doing to protect the consumer from
the dangers of aspartame?
Nothing.
Aspartame consumption is not only a problem in the United States--it is being
sold in over 70 countries throughout the world.
Note from Rhio: 2005 - Stevia is currently allowed to be sold in the USA.
Home |
New to Raw?
|
Hotline |
Action Forum |
|
Multi/Media |
Events |
Press/Media
|