Author: Joy Healey Added: September 9, 2008
Aspartame is an artificial sweetener which made an immense impact on the market as a sugar-replacement, particularly benefiting diabetics. In its heyday approximately 6,000 foods and drinks, even certain chewing gums and vitamin products contained Aspartame. It is marketed under several different tradenames, including Nutrasweet, Canderel, Equal and Tropicana Slim. In the European Union its E-number (additive code) is E951. The controversy continues as to whether the artificial sweetener aspartame really is a migraine trigger or not. The makers of NutraSweet staunchly deny any such correlation, pointing to a Duke University study they say completely discounts any such possibility(1). They usually neglect to mention that they funded the study, which consisted of a one day dosage of aspartame or placebo to migraine sufferers. On the basis that the findings showed no statistical difference between the two groups' incidence of headache that day, the aspartame backers claimed that the suggestion of aspartame causing headaches was unsubstantiated. The FDA have taken the study as conclusive proof, stating subsequently that there is nothing to substantiate the theory that aspartame is harmful to humans. The FDA first backed aspartame against critics in 1981 which is the year President Reagan first took office. Reagan had close ties with Searle drug company which manufactured the additive, and he fired the FDA commissioner who had been blocking the approval, then appointing Dr Arthur Hayes to the position. A Board of Inquiry convened and recommended continuing to deny approval, citing the incidence of seizures and brain tumors in laboratory animals. Hayes approved the additive against the Board's recommendation, and subsequently left the FDA for a position with Searle's public relations firm. Aspartame accounts for 75% of ALL complaints to the FDA for a food additive - with even MSG running a poor second. Some research has concluded that aspartame contains a carcinogen (substance that causes cancer) which is suspected by many scientists to be behind conditions ranging from brain tumors to epilepsy. A 13-week, double-blind, randomized cross-over study was conducted in 1988 by SM Koehler; the subsequent findings were amazing. Participants were given doses of aspartame or placebo, and the results from the test indicated that at least 50% of the subjects given aspartame had increasing frequency and duration of migraines, while those on placebo had decreased attacks(2). Various other double blind studies have concluded that aspartame did indeed cause worsening of migraines, the exception being the study financed by NutraSweet. In all aspartame research funded by NutraSweet, aspartame was not proven to have been the cause of any worrying symptoms. Other privately funded studies showed aspartame to be in fact responsible for headaches and other health problems in over 80% of tests, with the majority of the ones still showing inconclusive results being funded by the FDA, which has been accused of turning a blind eye to the dangers of aspartame since it was approved. In a very interesting twist, two patients studied by Newman and Lipton experienced worsening of migraine upon administration of rezatriptan, a medication that normally gave them relief. On examination, the medication was actually of a new form in a dissolvable wafer rather than the normal capsule - and the wafer was sweetened with aspartame. Aspartame had been identified as a trigger by both subjects. They were completely unaware that the rezatriptan medication in the wafer form contained aspartame, having just been issued the samples for ease of use in case a migraine started at work or school(3). The multiple symptoms of aspartame sensitivity don't stop with migraines, though headaches are one of the top three complaints. Extreme tiredness, dizziness, fainting spells and seizures are often reported, in addition to depression which in some instances has reached suicidal proportions. Critics of aspartame point to the research that found medical conditions associated with it and where the condition disappeared after patients avoided aspartame. Thousands more have spoken about worrying effects of aspartame on their health. On the other hand some well-respected scientists support the FDA view that aspartame is harmless. The sweetener converts into several breakdown products including aspartic acid, phenylalanine, methanol, formaldehyde and formic acid(4). Wikipedia records controversy surrounding the rate of breakdown into these various products and the effects that they have on folk who eat aspartame-sweetened foods. Even though phenylalanine is an essential amino acid and occurs naturally, it has an adverse effect on people born with phenylketonuria (PKU), a rare inherited condition which prevents correct metabolism of phenylalanine. Since individuals with PKU need to take account of aspartame as an additional source of phenylalanine, foods containing aspartame must carry warning labels. This is a rare condition, and sufferers know they must exclude aspartame from their diets so this isn't the most disturbing problem. The most suspect breakdown product in aspartame is methanol, which breaks down into formaldehyde, a highly toxic substance that the United States Environmental Protection Agency classified as a probable human carcinogen. Formaldehyde is used in embalming, glue, plywood, plastics, carpets and many other products. Because of toxicity concerns the EU has considered imposing a complete ban on its use even for embalming. Defenders of aspartame point out that methanol is present in many natural foods at even higher levels than a diet soda, but fail to acknowledge that the naturally occurring methanol is ALWAYS accompanied by ethanol and pectin, natural antidotes to methanol poisoning which cancel out any ill effects. Aspartame does not supply ethanol, neither do products that contain the sweetener. The controversy is far from over. The growing number of people claiming aspartame causes or worsens their migraines, has led many health professionals to believe aspartame to be a recognized trigger. Other symptoms are reported in increasing numbers each year. However to date (2008), the FDA insists that aspartame is perfectly safe with no plans to ban its inclusion in food products. One theory is that it is contained in so many diet foods that the commercial implications of withdrawing it would be financially prohibitive? Due to tumor concerns some manufacturers are slowly replacing it with sucralose, but as recipes will need reformulating and the products will need to be repackaged and quality controlled this will be a slow process. In the mean-time consumers may wish to avoid aspartame-containing products to check if they experience improvement of any troublesome symptoms. (1) Schiffman SS, Buckley CE III, Sampson JA, et al. Aspartame and susceptibility to headache. N Engl J Med. 1987; 317: 1181-1185. (2) Koehler, SM, A. Glaros, 1988. "The Effect of Aspartame on Migraine Headache," Headache, Volume 28, page 10-14. (3) Newman & Lipton: 3.75 mg aspartame in Merck Maxalt-MLT worsens migraine Oct 2001 7.28.2 (4) C. Trocho, R. Pardo, I. Rafecas, J. Virgili, X. Remesar, J. A. Fernandez-Lopez and M. Alemany (1998). "Formaldehyde derived from dietary aspartame binds to tissue components in vivo". Life Sciences, 63 (5): 337'349.
--- Further information on migraine can be obtained from my blog: http://natural-migraine-alternatives.blogspot.com
For an e.book packed with further information and recommendations on drug-free treatment and prevention of migraine, visit: http://www.natural-migraine-alternatives.com
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