Skeptoid #127: The Truth about Aspartame
The artificial sweetener aspartame is falsely accused of being the cause of nearly every disease. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
The artificial sweetener aspartame is falsely accused of being the cause of nearly every disease. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Aspartame: Science vs. Conspiracy
00:07:35
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| The artificial sweetener Aspartame is one of those products that people either love or hate. | |
| Its supporters appreciate their zero-calorie diet sodas. | |
| Its opponents claim that it is one of the most carcinogenic and poisonous compounds ever developed in the laboratory. | |
| Today we're going to point the skeptical eye at Aspartame and see which of the claims against it are supported by sound science. | |
| That's coming up next on Skeptoid. | |
| Hi, I'm Alex Goldman. | |
| You may know me as the host of Reply All, but I'm done with that. | |
| I'm doing something else now. | |
| I've started a new podcast called Hyperfixed. | |
| On every episode of HyperFixed, listeners write in with their problems and I try to solve them. | |
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| That's HyperFixed, the new podcast from Radiotopia. | |
| Find it wherever you listen to podcasts or at hyperfixedpod.com. | |
| You're listening to Skeptoid. | |
| I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. | |
| The truth about Aspartame. | |
| As a kid, I remember hearing that the artificial sweetener Aspartame would neutralize your digestive enzymes and anything else you ate that day would turn to fat. | |
| Although this makes no sense biochemically at any level, it sounded scientific enough to me, and I was satisfied with it. | |
| At least enough to justify my dislike for its awful flavor. | |
| It turns out that my fat-producing claim was about the mildest of many arguments made by a growing anti-aspartame movement. | |
| And biochemically nonsensical as it was, it was among the sanest of the arguments. | |
| Take a look at websites such as aspartamekills.com, sweetpoison.com, and darktruth.org, and you'll see that a whole new breed of aspartame opponents has taken activism to a whole new level. | |
| Here are a few quotes from those websites. | |
| Thank you, Montel Williams, for having the fortitude to say multiple sclerosis is often misdiagnosed and that it could be aspartame poisoning. | |
| NutraSweet killed my mother and has killed and/or wounded millions of innocent people in the U.S. and abroad. | |
| Aspartame converts to formaldehyde in vivo in the bodies of laboratory rats. | |
| Artificial sweetener aspartame, equal NutraSweet, linked to breast cancer and Gulf War syndrome. | |
| Did O.J. Simpson have a reaction to Aspartame that led to the deaths of Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman? | |
| The FDA, the International Food Information Council, Public Voice, and others are scam non-profit organizations and pawns of the NutraSweet company. | |
| After more than 20 years of aspartame use, the number of its victims is rapidly piling up, and people are figuring out for themselves that aspartame is at the root of their health problems. | |
| Patients are teaching their doctors about this nutritional peril, and they are healing themselves with little to no support from traditional medicine. | |
| Donald Rumsfeld disregarded safety issues and used his political muscle to get aspartame approved. | |
| The Nazi Scientists' Poison Projects poison adults with aspartame. | |
| Because of you and or your forebears' exposure to toxics like aspartame, a summation of immune, mitochondrial, DNA, and mtDNA damage has occurred in your body that has made your body unable to deal with chemical insults. | |
| The doctor that was in charge of the lab to study aspartame reported that the substance was too toxic and he mysteriously disappeared and all the paperwork somehow was destroyed. | |
| The Nazis actually won the war. | |
| They just pretended to lose so we wouldn't notice them take over our government. | |
| Well, that's enough for now. | |
| And if you haven't heard those, you've almost certainly received one of several hoax emails that people have been forwarding around since 1995, according to Snopes.com, giving an equally long list of untrue claims about aspartame being the cause of nearly every illness. | |
| One is even falsely attributed to Dr. Dina Dell. | |
| Suffice it to say that every possible kind of attack is made against aspartame. | |
| Pseudoscientific attacks where they throw out whole dictionaries of scientific sounding nonsense. | |
| Guilt by association attacks where they mention aspartame alongside Adolf Hitler and Donald Rumsfeld. | |
| Non-sequiturs like pointing out the evils of the corporate structure of pharmaceutical companies as if that is somehow support for how and why an aspartame detoxification program will heal you of all disease. | |
| And even Bible quotations attacking aspartame. | |
| The anti-aspartame lobby appears to include everyone from alternative treatment vendors trying to sell their products to fully delusional conspiracy theorists. | |
| Dr. Russell Blaylock, a retired surgeon turned anti-pharmaceutical author and activist, believes aspartame is part of a massive government mind control plot. | |
| We're developing a society because of all of these different toxins known to affect brain function. | |
| We're seeing a society that not only has a lot more people of lower IQ, but a lot fewer people of higher IQ. | |
| In other words, a dumbing down, a chemical dumbing down of society. | |
| That leaves them dependent on government because they can't excel. | |
| So, you know, you can kind of piece it together as to why they are so insistent in spending so many hundreds of millions of dollars of propaganda mine to dumb down society. | |
| Discovered in 1965 at Searle, now Pfizer, aspartame is an artificial sweetener, aspartylphenylalanine-1-methyl ester. | |
| Chemistry types call it a methyl ester of the dipeptide of the amino acids aspartic acid and phenylalanine. | |
| It is 180 times as sweet as sugar, which is why it's such an effective low-calorie sweetener. | |
| It's needed in only minuscule amounts. | |
| Partly in response to all the anti-aspartame craziness out there, a group of scientists from the NutraSweet Company published a 2002 review of dozens of studies and clinical trials performed worldwide in the journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology, which made the following conclusions. | |
| Over 20 years have elapsed since aspartame was approved by regulatory agencies as a sweetener and flavor enhancer. | |
| The safety of aspartame and its metabolic constituents was established through extensive toxicology studies in laboratory animals, using much greater doses than people could possibly consume. | |
| Several scientific issues continue to be raised after approval, largely as a concern from theoretical toxicity from its metabolic components, the amino acids, aspartate and phenylalanine, and methanol, even though dietary exposure to these components is much greater than from aspartame. | |
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Debunking Formaldehyde Myths
00:08:58
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| Nonetheless, additional research including evaluations of possible associations between aspartame and headaches, seizures, behavior, cognition, and mood, as well as allergic type reactions and use by potentially sensitive subpopulations, has continued after approval. | |
| The safety testing of aspartame has gone well beyond that required to evaluate the safety of a food additive. | |
| When all the research on aspartame is examined as a whole, it is clear that aspartame is safe and there are no unresolved questions regarding its safety under conditions of intended use. | |
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| This is also the only opportunity you'll have to hear Flint and I talk about our experiences when we both went on Joe Rogan to represent the causes of science and reality against whatever it is that you get when you're thrown into that lion pit. | |
| We set sail from Malaga, Spain on April 18th, 2026 and finished the adventure in Nice, France on April 25th. | |
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| That's skeptoid.com slash adventures. | |
| And yet the claims persist unabated. | |
| Here are a few more addressed point by point. | |
| Claims that aspartame causes multiple sclerosis are entirely made up and have no evidence or plausible foundation. | |
| Search the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation's website for aspartame to find more than enough information refuting this harmfully misleading claim. | |
| The idea that aspartame causes methanol toxicity is based on the fact that when digested, aspartame does release a tiny amount of methanol. | |
| It's less than the amount you get from eating a piece of most any fruit. | |
| Tomato juice, for example, gives you four times the methanol of a can of diet soda. | |
| It's a common, naturally occurring environmental compound that is found in many foods. | |
| Nancy Markle, one of the most vocal aspartame conspiracy theorists, charges that the autoimmune disease lupus is actually misdiagnosed methanol toxicity caused by drinking three to four cans of diet soft drinks per day. | |
| If she's right, everyone who drinks a glass of tomato juice each day, or the equivalent in other fruits, is gravely ill with lupus. | |
| Time magazine once devoted an entire article to debunking Nancy Markle's baseless claims about aspartame. | |
| Much has been made of the claim that aspartame turns into formaldehyde in your system. | |
| This is true, because formaldehyde is a natural byproduct of digestion of methanol, and it happens whenever you eat almost anything. | |
| Formaldehyde is carcinogenic and is considered very dangerous in cases of occupational exposure, for example, when you get a dosage many orders of magnitude greater than the trace amounts produced during natural digestion. | |
| Again, aspartame does this in much smaller amounts than many common foods, so this has been a normal, healthy component of digestion for as long as humans have been eating fruits and vegetables. | |
| Gulf War syndrome is a weakly evidenced correlation between service in the Gulf War and incidences of chronic fatigue, chronic pain, and a range of vague neurological conditions. | |
| Anti-aspartame advocates blame aspartame for this, but there is no correlation between increased aspartame consumption and Gulf War service. | |
| In addition, aspartame is among the hypothesized causes that have been eliminated by the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses. | |
| What about Donald Rumsfeld's involvement with Aspartame? | |
| He was the CEO of Searle at the time aspartame was approved as a sweetener. | |
| The reason he was hired was as a financial turnaround wizard, which he accomplished. | |
| He wasn't the guy in the lab designing artificial sweeteners. | |
| Even if you accept the conspiracy charges that he leveraged his cronies to force approval of a potentially dangerous product, that still says nothing about aspartame. | |
| It's a giant non-sequitur. | |
| To assess the safety of a product, we don't ask who was the CEO and who were his cronies. | |
| We ask, what are the test results? | |
| And so far, all of the test results show no association between aspartame and any of the diseases it is claimed to cause. | |
| Some of the claims about aspartame breaking down into unwanted compounds are true at extreme levels of alkalinity or acidity, levels which would be fatal to a human being anyway. | |
| This is the case with many foods. | |
| By no means is this unique to aspartame. | |
| So if your body chemistry is such that aspartame would be a danger to you, you'd have to already be dead from some unrelated cause. | |
| There is actually one known health risk associated with aspartame, but it only applies to people with a rare genetic disorder on chromosome 12 called phenylketonuria, or PKU, which affects about 1 in 15,000 people. | |
| They can't metabolize phenylalanine, so they need to minimize not only aspartame, but all phenylalanine products. | |
| Phenylalanine is an amino acid that's found in many, many foods, including breast milk, so it hardly makes sense to single out aspartame as the problem product. | |
| It is true that you can't cook with aspartame, but not for any safety reasons. | |
| At cooking temperatures, it breaks down and loses its flavor, like some other foods. | |
| For this reason, aspartame is starting to lose ground in the market to sucralose, another artificial sweetener that does retain its flavor when cooked. | |
| When you hear claims that are supported only by a fringe minority that's in opposition to the scientific consensus, you have good reason to be skeptical right off the bat, but it doesn't mean it's not worth looking into. | |
| Aspartame has been looked into ad nauseum even after its approval and found safe at every try. | |
| So at some point you have to depart from rationality to continue supporting the claims made against it. | |
| Enjoy your diet, Dr. Pepper. | |
| It's not going to hurt you. | |
| If it was, I'd have been dead decades ago. | |
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| I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. | |
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