To: Team Nutrasweet Monsanto
Date: 2/2/99
Re: Correcting Internet Myths About NutraSweet
In your response to the email article regarding the dangers of
aspartame, you have presented a one-sided self-serving polemic defending
your potentially dangerous product. By ignoring the scientific studies
which disagree with your position, you are doing a great disservice to
consumers. Further, you may have created a base for litigation against
your company by denying the existing science.
As one example, your comment that "formate is quickly eliminated by the
body" is demonstrably false. Your response states that "the body
converts the methanol to formaldehyde which is instantly converted to a
metabolite called formate." The study done by Trocho et al.,
Formaldehyde derived from dietary aspartame binds to tissue components
in vivo. Life Sciences 63:5:p.337-49, 1998, clearly demonstrates
cellular persistence and accumulation, or in layman's terms, that
formaldehyde can remain and accumulate in the body.
As another example, you claim that tomato juice contains methanol
(commonly known as wood alcohol). "Team Nutrasweet" says in their
response "there is four to five times more methanol obtained from a
serving of tomato juice than from an equivalent volume of beverage
sweetened with aspartame." I challenge your make-up artists to
scientifically demonstrate that wood alcohol is present in tomato juice
at the levels you allege. On the other hand, upon chemical analysis,
methanol will be found in aspartame, as it is a basic component of this
substance.
As to the incidence of neurologic degenerative diseases, Monsanto's
response claims there has been no change in Alzheimer's disease, MS,
lupus, and other diseases. Yet many sources tell a different story.
(Evans, et al. Prevalence of Probable Alzheimer's Disease in persons
aged 85 and older, JAMA 262 (1989)2531-2556; Blaylock R, Excitotoxins:
The Taste that Kills, Health Press, 1998, p. 107; and Lilienfeld et al:
Two Decades of Increasing Mortality from Parkinson's Disease among the
US Elderly, Arch Neurol 47(1990):731-734.) But then again, Team
Nutrasweet's spin doctors appear to not be interested in studies which
don't promote the use of their product.
There is overwhelming scientific evidence that Nutrasweet can pose a
serious health danger. I applaud the Internet's remarkable capacity to
transmit the truth beyond the reach of your corporate advertising
dollars.
George R. Schwartz, M.D.
Board-certified physician