Why Aspartame Isn't Scary

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Replies

  • alex111444
    alex111444 Posts: 10 Member
    hi, i have a question about another sweetner that i thought of using instead of aspartame, but after reading your study and realising aspartame is safe i think i will just go with that, anyway. my question is concerning stevia. is it a good sweetner too compared to aspartame? i have read that not many studies have been done on it and that they concluded it was safe when people owning the brand paid scientist to do test on the product.. which seems shady
  • stevencloser
    stevencloser Posts: 8,911 Member
    Why would that be shady? Who else is supposed to pay for the study?
  • Hornsby
    Hornsby Posts: 10,322 Member
    alex111444 wrote: »
    hi, i have a question about another sweetner that i thought of using instead of aspartame, but after reading your study and realising aspartame is safe i think i will just go with that, anyway. my question is concerning stevia. is it a good sweetner too compared to aspartame? i have read that not many studies have been done on it and that they concluded it was safe when people owning the brand paid scientist to do test on the product.. which seems shady

    Many companies pay to have their product tested. That's not odd. You have to do your due diligence and review who did the testing itself and determine their reliability.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,970 Member
    Hope228 wrote: »
    Lourdesong wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    My neurologist told me to stop using it. That's good enough for me. The man saved my life and I trust him completely.
    Why did he tell you that? How did the subject of aspartame come up?
    I mean, if you told him you get headaches or something after consuming aspartame and he then advised "alrighty, then stop consuming aspartame", that would be very different advice than telling you to stop because he has a solid belief that consumption poses real health risks.

    I have Multiple Sclerosis. I am very careful about what I consume. I am not saying Aspartame caused it (neither did my Dr) but I had been consuming a lot of it. I was advised to stop using it and that's what I did.
    That's different that what the general population goes through. A diabetic can't consume sugar the same way someone in general population can who doesn't have a disease. That doesn't mean sugar is bad.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,970 Member
    spkout2005 wrote: »
    Its bad, worse then we have been lead to believe..christ even the evil soda companys arnt using it anymore, diet soda is bad period..dont drink it, the less sugar, reql or fake in yoir body the better Period
    You'd have to back up why you think it's "bad". So feel free to post info that can contradict what peer reviewed clinical studies have been posted on here. If you in fact drink any protein shakes, the majority of them use artificial sweeteners to reduce calories.

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  • BinaryPulsar
    BinaryPulsar Posts: 8,927 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    Lourdesong wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    My neurologist told me to stop using it. That's good enough for me. The man saved my life and I trust him completely.
    Why did he tell you that? How did the subject of aspartame come up?
    I mean, if you told him you get headaches or something after consuming aspartame and he then advised "alrighty, then stop consuming aspartame", that would be very different advice than telling you to stop because he has a solid belief that consumption poses real health risks.

    I have Multiple Sclerosis. I am very careful about what I consume. I am not saying Aspartame caused it (neither did my Dr) but I had been consuming a lot of it. I was advised to stop using it and that's what I did.
    That's different that what the general population goes through. A diabetic can't consume sugar the same way someone in general population can who doesn't have a disease. That doesn't mean sugar is bad.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    It's still helpful when people share their experience since a lot of the population does have auto-immune diseases such as MS, and then people could check with their own doctor about their own symptoms.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,970 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    Lourdesong wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    My neurologist told me to stop using it. That's good enough for me. The man saved my life and I trust him completely.
    Why did he tell you that? How did the subject of aspartame come up?
    I mean, if you told him you get headaches or something after consuming aspartame and he then advised "alrighty, then stop consuming aspartame", that would be very different advice than telling you to stop because he has a solid belief that consumption poses real health risks.

    I have Multiple Sclerosis. I am very careful about what I consume. I am not saying Aspartame caused it (neither did my Dr) but I had been consuming a lot of it. I was advised to stop using it and that's what I did.
    That's different that what the general population goes through. A diabetic can't consume sugar the same way someone in general population can who doesn't have a disease. That doesn't mean sugar is bad.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    It's still helpful when people share their experience since a lot of the population does have auto-immune diseases such as MS, and then people could check with their own doctor about their own symptoms.
    If someone has a disease though, shouldn't it be their responsibility to inquire about this before ingesting aspartame? Instead of just taking the "well I'll try it and see what happens"?
    The response was to "my neuro told me know and that was good enough for me" without stating she had a health issue. Had that info been divulged before the response, I would have likely agreed.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

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  • BinaryPulsar
    BinaryPulsar Posts: 8,927 Member
    edited August 2016
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    Lourdesong wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    My neurologist told me to stop using it. That's good enough for me. The man saved my life and I trust him completely.
    Why did he tell you that? How did the subject of aspartame come up?
    I mean, if you told him you get headaches or something after consuming aspartame and he then advised "alrighty, then stop consuming aspartame", that would be very different advice than telling you to stop because he has a solid belief that consumption poses real health risks.

    I have Multiple Sclerosis. I am very careful about what I consume. I am not saying Aspartame caused it (neither did my Dr) but I had been consuming a lot of it. I was advised to stop using it and that's what I did.
    That's different that what the general population goes through. A diabetic can't consume sugar the same way someone in general population can who doesn't have a disease. That doesn't mean sugar is bad.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    It's still helpful when people share their experience since a lot of the population does have auto-immune diseases such as MS, and then people could check with their own doctor about their own symptoms.
    If someone has a disease though, shouldn't it be their responsibility to inquire about this before ingesting aspartame? Instead of just taking the "well I'll try it and see what happens"?
    The response was to "my neuro told me know and that was good enough for me" without stating she had a health issue. Had that info been divulged before the response, I would have likely agreed.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    I only saw the comment where she said she had MS. Maybe there was another comment I didn't see. I'm not completely sure what you are saying exactly. There are lots of things people don't know could be an issue. They need info just like anyone else. If everyone says aspartame is always harmless why would they consider otherwise and bother their doctor with an unnecessary question in their 15 minute time slot in which they are addressing a lot of serious symptoms that they run out of time to address and have to wait three months until their next appointment. And end up with a doctor angry at them for wasting their time. Maybe it's different in the US. In Canada it's difficult to get any time with doctors and sometimes have to wait a year for an appointment with a specialist.
  • SueInAz
    SueInAz Posts: 6,592 Member
    edited August 2016
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    Lourdesong wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    My neurologist told me to stop using it. That's good enough for me. The man saved my life and I trust him completely.
    Why did he tell you that? How did the subject of aspartame come up?
    I mean, if you told him you get headaches or something after consuming aspartame and he then advised "alrighty, then stop consuming aspartame", that would be very different advice than telling you to stop because he has a solid belief that consumption poses real health risks.

    I have Multiple Sclerosis. I am very careful about what I consume. I am not saying Aspartame caused it (neither did my Dr) but I had been consuming a lot of it. I was advised to stop using it and that's what I did.
    That's different that what the general population goes through. A diabetic can't consume sugar the same way someone in general population can who doesn't have a disease. That doesn't mean sugar is bad.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    It's still helpful when people share their experience since a lot of the population does have auto-immune diseases such as MS, and then people could check with their own doctor about their own symptoms.
    If someone has a disease though, shouldn't it be their responsibility to inquire about this before ingesting aspartame? Instead of just taking the "well I'll try it and see what happens"?
    The response was to "my neuro told me know and that was good enough for me" without stating she had a health issue. Had that info been divulged before the response, I would have likely agreed.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    I only saw the comment where she said she had MS. Maybe there was another comment I didn't see. I'm not completely sure what you are saying exactly. There are lots of things people don't know could be an issue. They need info just like anyone else. If everyone says aspartame is always harmless why would they consider otherwise and bother their doctor with an unnecessary question in their 15 minute time slot in which they are addressing a lot of serious symptoms that they run out of time to address and have to wait three months until their next appointment. And end up with a doctor angry at them for wasting their time. Maybe it's different in the US. In Canada it's difficult to get any time with doctors and sometimes have to wait a year for an appointment with a specialist.

    Just because someone has MS doesn't mean that aspartame is going to be a problem so why should that be placed out there as some type of warning just because one person says it's a problem for them? A co-worker of mine has MS and she drinks Diet Coke every day without issues.

    The point is, while everyone is different, to the population at large aspartame is harmless. Anecdotal "evidence" isn't always helpful and can actually muddy the waters for the average person. Anything can be harmful to any one person which doesn't affect anyone else. Peanuts, watermelon and wheat are perfectly harmless to the vast majority of the population but could kill anyone with a severe allergy to them. Should we really go around telling everyone to be wary of eating those things because they affect a small minority?
  • BinaryPulsar
    BinaryPulsar Posts: 8,927 Member
    edited August 2016
    SueInAz wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    Lourdesong wrote: »
    Hope228 wrote: »
    My neurologist told me to stop using it. That's good enough for me. The man saved my life and I trust him completely.
    Why did he tell you that? How did the subject of aspartame come up?
    I mean, if you told him you get headaches or something after consuming aspartame and he then advised "alrighty, then stop consuming aspartame", that would be very different advice than telling you to stop because he has a solid belief that consumption poses real health risks.

    I have Multiple Sclerosis. I am very careful about what I consume. I am not saying Aspartame caused it (neither did my Dr) but I had been consuming a lot of it. I was advised to stop using it and that's what I did.
    That's different that what the general population goes through. A diabetic can't consume sugar the same way someone in general population can who doesn't have a disease. That doesn't mean sugar is bad.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    It's still helpful when people share their experience since a lot of the population does have auto-immune diseases such as MS, and then people could check with their own doctor about their own symptoms.
    If someone has a disease though, shouldn't it be their responsibility to inquire about this before ingesting aspartame? Instead of just taking the "well I'll try it and see what happens"?
    The response was to "my neuro told me know and that was good enough for me" without stating she had a health issue. Had that info been divulged before the response, I would have likely agreed.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    I only saw the comment where she said she had MS. Maybe there was another comment I didn't see. I'm not completely sure what you are saying exactly. There are lots of things people don't know could be an issue. They need info just like anyone else. If everyone says aspartame is always harmless why would they consider otherwise and bother their doctor with an unnecessary question in their 15 minute time slot in which they are addressing a lot of serious symptoms that they run out of time to address and have to wait three months until their next appointment. And end up with a doctor angry at them for wasting their time. Maybe it's different in the US. In Canada it's difficult to get any time with doctors and sometimes have to wait a year for an appointment with a specialist.

    Just because someone has MS doesn't mean that aspartame is going to be a problem so why should that be placed out there as some type of warning just because one person says it's a problem for them? A co-worker of mine has MS and she drinks Diet Coke every day without issues.

    The point is, while everyone is different, to the population at large aspartame is harmless. Anecdotal "evidence" isn't always helpful and can actually muddy the waters for the average person. Anything can be harmful to any one person which doesn't affect anyone else. Peanuts, watermelon and wheat are perfectly harmless to the vast majority of the population but could kill anyone with a severe allergy to them. Should we really go around telling everyone to be wary of eating those things because they affect a small minority?

    I actually wasn't trying to say any of that. I didn't even intend to get into this conversation. I really didn't understand the reply, so I didn't really know how to respond to it (honestly). The only thing I was actually trying to say is that on mfp people often say to people that they have no place posting in the threads and sharing if it's about having a medical condition which is different from the general population. I was only saying that I personally think it's ok for people to share about that in mfp threads. That was actually all I was trying to say. I don't really have an argument or a conversation to get into. And I really don't care beyond that one thing. I don't have any reason to discuss aspartame because I don't like the taste of it. And if people enjoy it, I don't have an issue with that either. I really have no investment in this conversation or issue of aspartame. And my second reply was also not about the main topic. It was a confused reply to a comment about being medically responsible for oneself that I didn't understand. I never said the entire population should make decisions based on some people having negative reactions (or even people that share the medical issues). Just that it's ok to acknowledge if a person has a negative reaction due to personal circumstances. I know it's individual. And I hope most people can have that reasonable understanding.
  • rebel_26
    rebel_26 Posts: 1,826 Member
    are these reports hokum? I fully get the "causality" statements made in some reports as its true we dont know if people are consuming these diet sodas while gobling down their fast food meals (I suspect many are) and I also get the whole moderation part of the argument as well, but I know many people in my life whom consume several diet sodas a day and they always say "well its 0 calories". I dont view soda (diet or regular) as a healthy choice at all to drink. To have one occasionally fine but to make it your staple choice of beverage I say boo. I guess I am biased as I haven't had a soda in years ...I guess i am just like a person who quit cigarettes.

    http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/32/4/688.full

    https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclopedia/content.aspx?ContentTypeID=56&ContentID=19891
  • fishshark
    fishshark Posts: 1,886 Member
    it may not be scary but to me tastes like *kitten*.
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,270 Member
    Well, yes that may be so - but nearly everyone has something they think tastes *kitten* - it doesn't really have any relevance to other people though.

    I personally quite dislike watermelon and cucumber - but I don't think that has any relevance to other people and whether they consume it or not.
  • Trailtramper74
    Trailtramper74 Posts: 135 Member
    edited August 2016
    My bariatric doc prohibits the use of Aspartame or Splenda, but they give you Phenylalanine as a craving deterrent. Go figure. I don't think Aspartame is to be feared, but it tastes like poison to me, so I don't use it. Splenda tastes bad to me too. Stevia isn't that great either. I think I will stick to small amounts of real sugar. Artificial sweeteners also seem to fuel my hunger. I see a lot of people drinking Diet Coke doing no better than those drinking Coke.
  • psuLemon
    psuLemon Posts: 38,426 MFP Moderator
    edited August 2016
    rebel_26 wrote: »
    are these reports hokum? I fully get the "causality" statements made in some reports as its true we dont know if people are consuming these diet sodas while gobling down their fast food meals (I suspect many are) and I also get the whole moderation part of the argument as well, but I know many people in my life whom consume several diet sodas a day and they always say "well its 0 calories". I dont view soda (diet or regular) as a healthy choice at all to drink. To have one occasionally fine but to make it your staple choice of beverage I say boo. I guess I am biased as I haven't had a soda in years ...I guess i am just like a person who quit cigarettes.

    http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/32/4/688.full

    https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclopedia/content.aspx?ContentTypeID=56&ContentID=19891

    For many of us, diet soda has been a main reason for our success to become healthier. For me, it helped me cut out 600 calories + of regular soda, and allowed me to eat more food for a much more sustainable diet. With that, i have lost 50 lbs and improved all health markers across the board. And since it's mostly water, I would struggle to see how it would be unhealthy.

    IRT the bold, it's the same questions the study is asking: "First, it has been hypothesized that artificial sweeteners may increase hedonistic desires for sweetness and more energy-dense foods (10–12). Second, overconsumption of other foods/beverages may also occur in conjunction with diet beverage consumption owing to overestimation of the number of calories saved by substituting diet beverages for sugar-sweetened beverages (4). Third, the association between diet beverages and weight gain may be biased by early awareness of energy imbalance, i.e., diet beverage consumption may serve as a proxy for early (failed) attempts to maintain weight."


    The bigger question is, would these results be repeatable in a controlled study (not self reported recall study). I ask this because we know how difficult it is to recall the amount of calories consumed and even trained professionals under report results.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,970 Member
    edited August 2016
    rebel_26 wrote: »
    are these reports hokum? I fully get the "causality" statements made in some reports as its true we dont know if people are consuming these diet sodas while gobling down their fast food meals (I suspect many are) and I also get the whole moderation part of the argument as well, but I know many people in my life whom consume several diet sodas a day and they always say "well its 0 calories". I dont view soda (diet or regular) as a healthy choice at all to drink. To have one occasionally fine but to make it your staple choice of beverage I say boo. I guess I am biased as I haven't had a soda in years ...I guess i am just like a person who quit cigarettes.

    http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/32/4/688.full
    Funny though that the ADA recommends diet soda as something diabetics should drink.
    Correlation doesn't equal causation. In fact the article couldn't tell why it was correlated.
    I quit cigarettes because even though I knew they were bad, having a kid committed me to quitting. There really are no pros to smoking to keep your health up.
    But diet sodas in moderation haven't been shown to be dangerous at all (with the exception of PKU). With aspartame being one of the most studied additives EVER, you'd think there would be conclusive evidence that it leads to health demise.
    Personally I've drank diet soda for over 25+ years now on daily basis. I have good oral hygiene, so no teeth problems, I drink it with my occasional McDonald's, Taco Bell or KFC but stay with calories, and sometimes I just drink it by itself because I like it. If the health issues purported by naysayers should have happened to me, it should have at least shown something (even the smallest inkling) by now. I tend to believe what peer reviewed clinical studies have shown and the overwhelming majority show no issues with moderation intake.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
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  • queenliz99
    queenliz99 Posts: 15,317 Member
    bump
  • SueInAz
    SueInAz Posts: 6,592 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    rebel_26 wrote: »
    are these reports hokum? I fully get the "causality" statements made in some reports as its true we dont know if people are consuming these diet sodas while gobling down their fast food meals (I suspect many are) and I also get the whole moderation part of the argument as well, but I know many people in my life whom consume several diet sodas a day and they always say "well its 0 calories". I dont view soda (diet or regular) as a healthy choice at all to drink. To have one occasionally fine but to make it your staple choice of beverage I say boo. I guess I am biased as I haven't had a soda in years ...I guess i am just like a person who quit cigarettes.

    http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/32/4/688.full
    Funny though that the ADA recommends diet soda as something diabetics should drink.
    Correlation doesn't equal causation. In fact the article couldn't tell why it was correlated.
    I quit cigarettes because even though I knew they were bad, having a kid committed me to quitting. There really are no pros to smoking to keep your health up.
    But diet sodas in moderation haven't been shown to be dangerous at all (with the exception of PKU). With aspartame being one of the most studied additives EVER, you'd think there would be conclusive evidence that it leads to health demise.
    Personally I've drank diet soda for over 25+ years now on daily basis. I have good oral hygiene, so no teeth problems, I drink it with my occasional McDonald's, Taco Bell or KFC but stay with calories, and sometimes I just drink it by itself because I like it. If the health issues purported by naysayers should have happened to me, it should have at least shown something (even the smallest inkling) by now. I tend to believe what peer reviewed clinical studies have shown and the overwhelming majority show no issues with moderation intake.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png


    Ditto for me. I started drinking Tab in high school in the early 1980s. When Diet Coke came out I switched to that. There has never been a period longer than about 2 months in the last 35 years where I wasn't drinking at least one diet soda per day, and many days more than one or two.

    The 2 month period was a few years ago when one of my sisters was nagging me about it and claiming that it might be causing some of my minor health problems. Just to humor her, and because I was genuinely interested in the results, I gave up all artificial sweeteners for those 2 months and it made zero difference.... Well, it did make a difference in my mood because I was cranky about giving up drinking diet soda and finding something besides plain water to drink but there was no other difference to my health or anything else.

    If there really were some negative health effects to aspartame or sucralose I'm sure I would have succumbed to them before now.
  • charleycartee
    charleycartee Posts: 49 Member
    I wish these kinds of articles would not get posted. Neither pro nor con.
    I have never had problems with artificial sweeteners, but largely avoid them ( as I do most sugar ) because I don't like sweet stuff very much. So I am fine. A friend of mine gets awful migraines ( the have to stay in a dark room kind ) and another one gets impaired vision.....
    That is why I don't like those generalized articles, because any food item ( natural or artificial ) is fine for most people while health and even life threatening for others. Blanket statements do not help....

    What article?

    This is an honest question, I'm actually curious. Maybe someone could explain, like the people who know the science, why aspartame would cause impaired vision as a side effect or something. To me, this sounds like someone just blaming this on aspartame without actually knowing that's what's caused it. Any insight?

    Yup, it's just anecdotal bs
  • hlltwin
    hlltwin Posts: 55 Member
    FireOpalCO wrote: »
    I just want to know why it gives me migraines. I'm not normally prone to them, but accidental ingestion of aspartame? Just kill me now. It won't be hard, I won't be moving from this spot.

    I want to know this too, since both my sister and mother also get migraines from it. I don't like the taste, personally. (I don't like the taste of Splenda either). I just avoid artificial sweeteners because they taste bad to me and they're not in the house to accidentally ingest to protect my family from extreme headaches.
  • Aaron_K123
    Aaron_K123 Posts: 7,122 Member
    edited September 2016
    mispost, posted on the wrong thread
  • Aaron_K123
    Aaron_K123 Posts: 7,122 Member
    edited September 2016
    hlltwin wrote: »
    FireOpalCO wrote: »
    I just want to know why it gives me migraines. I'm not normally prone to them, but accidental ingestion of aspartame? Just kill me now. It won't be hard, I won't be moving from this spot.

    I want to know this too, since both my sister and mother also get migraines from it. I don't like the taste, personally. (I don't like the taste of Splenda either). I just avoid artificial sweeteners because they taste bad to me and they're not in the house to accidentally ingest to protect my family from extreme headaches.

    Migraine triggers are one of those things everyone just has to sort of shrug about. If you do X and it causes you a migraine I agree you shouldn't do X. That doesn't mean X causes brain damage. I know you didn't make that claim, just saying.

    And if you don't like the taste that is a perfectly good reason to avoid it.
  • jondspen
    jondspen Posts: 253 Member
    edited September 2016
    I know for a fact that aspartame is bad. I was drinking diet cokes/pepsi (~ 1 ltr a day or so) and as soon as I had some, not long after would get aching in back of my knees and down in my calves. Stopped the diet sodas...and it went away completely after a couple weeks. Started back after a month or two off it, and that day, maybe an hour later, started getting legs aches again.

    You can say what you want about the science...but obviously there are some people that have adverse reactions to it (1). And FYI....there are plenty of drugs approved by the FDA with sound research behind them that were later found to be bad for humans (2).

    (1) Ciappuccini R, et al. Aspartame-induced fibromyalgia, an unusual but curable cause of chronic pain. Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology 2010;28(63):S131-133

    (2) http://prescriptiondrugs.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=005528
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    edited September 2016
    That some people have adverse reactions doesn't mean something is unhealthy for humans.

    For example, penicillin got me sent to the hospital. Yet for many people (far more), it keeps them out.

    My sister has stomach pain associated with avocados and melon (foods she used to love). Yet I eat them all the time, no bad reactions, and same with many.

    I have no issues with dairy; many do. So on.
  • Wetcoaster
    Wetcoaster Posts: 1,788 Member
    edited September 2016
    jondspen wrote: »
    I know for a fact that aspartame is bad. I was drinking diet cokes/pepsi (~ 1 ltr a day or so) and as soon as I had some, not long after would get aching in back of my knees and down in my calves. Stopped the diet sodas...and it went away completely after a couple weeks. Started back after a month or two off it, and that day, maybe an hour later, started getting legs aches again.

    You can say what you want about the science...but obviously there are some people that have adverse reactions to it (1). And FYI....there are plenty of drugs approved by the FDA with sound research behind them that were later found to be bad for humans.

    (1) Ciappuccini R, et al. Aspartame-induced fibromyalgia, an unusual but curable cause of chronic pain. Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology 2010;28(63):S131-133

    A fact....Ok...is it bad or bad for you?
  • Wetcoaster
    Wetcoaster Posts: 1,788 Member
    I have been drinking diet pop since the days of Tab back in the early 80's. Not sure why my blood work is still great.
  • psuLemon
    psuLemon Posts: 38,426 MFP Moderator
    jondspen wrote: »
    I know for a fact that aspartame is bad. I was drinking diet cokes/pepsi (~ 1 ltr a day or so) and as soon as I had some, not long after would get aching in back of my knees and down in my calves. Stopped the diet sodas...and it went away completely after a couple weeks. Started back after a month or two off it, and that day, maybe an hour later, started getting legs aches again.

    You can say what you want about the science...but obviously there are some people that have adverse reactions to it (1). And FYI....there are plenty of drugs approved by the FDA with sound research behind them that were later found to be bad for humans.

    (1) Ciappuccini R, et al. Aspartame-induced fibromyalgia, an unusual but curable cause of chronic pain. Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology 2010;28(63):S131-133

    I drink almost a 2L a day without any issue. So its kind of a bad argument. My wife cant have gluten due to a medical issue. But that doesn't make it bad for all of us?
  • malibu927
    malibu927 Posts: 17,562 Member
    jondspen wrote: »
    I know for a fact that aspartame is bad. I was drinking diet cokes/pepsi (~ 1 ltr a day or so) and as soon as I had some, not long after would get aching in back of my knees and down in my calves. Stopped the diet sodas...and it went away completely after a couple weeks. Started back after a month or two off it, and that day, maybe an hour later, started getting legs aches again.

    You can say what you want about the science...but obviously there are some people that have adverse reactions to it (1). And FYI....there are plenty of drugs approved by the FDA with sound research behind them that were later found to be bad for humans.

    (1) Ciappuccini R, et al. Aspartame-induced fibromyalgia, an unusual but curable cause of chronic pain. Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology 2010;28(63):S131-133

    That just means it's bad for you. In the 2+ years I've been drinking diet soda I've never had any adverse effects.