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hotwings402

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 3, 2005
Posts
112
Interesting excerpt,

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 cumlative deliterious 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 and Pilot (1990) and a paper warning about aspartame was presented at the 57th Annual Meeting of the Aerospace Medical Association (Gaffney 1986).
Recently, a hotline was 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)

One of the original studies on aspartame was performed in 1969 by an independent scientist, Dr Harry Waisman. He studied the effects of aspartame on infant primates. Out of the seven infant monkeys, one died after 300 days and five others had grand mal seizures. Of course, these negative findings were not submitted to the FDA during the approval process.(22)
 
Hmmmm,

Diet sodas, flavored waters that say they contain it, diet jello, diet "sugar free" popsicles. Blue or red "sugar" packets at restaurants. Can't think of more but some "foods" have it in it too but it will say something like contains aspartme, saccrin, phenokylienes (sp?)
 
You gotta' love how 600 pilots diagnosed their grand mal seizures as being the result of aspartame.

What a crock... You can bet that this is soon to be the litigeur de jour for that admirable American institution, the trial lawyer.

I notice your so-called, "fact-based" web site advises staying away from information sources that may have food industry support and instead get information from information sources funded by lawyers and doctors that can be hired as "expert" witnesses for litigation.
 
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