Have you ever thought why ‘outside’ food tastes so much
better than home food? You may be following the same recipe for a
particular dish you ordered at the restaurant or that dip you picked
off the rack at the supermarket, but somehow you can never match the
taste! Well, that’s because you don’t store MSG in your kitchen
cabinets. MSG what, you ask? Read on to know more about this invisible
factor creeping into our bodies through the food we eat, like a silent
parasite that preys on you without your slightest knowledge!

MSG,
or Monosodium Glutamate is a ‘flavour enhancer’. It tricks the brain
into thinking it is getting something tasty. It is not a preservative
and it has no nutritional value. It does nothing to food, but it does
affect the person using it. 

In fact, some of the common
ailments we experience today can largely be connected to ingesting MSG,
a chemical commonly used in many food products we eat. Regular
occurrence of headaches/migraines, lethargy, anxiety, panic attacks,
disorientation, insomnia, nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, stomach cramps,
irritable bowel syndrome, bloating, asthma attacks, shortness of
breath, chest pain or tightness, runny nose/sneezing, extreme dryness
of the mouth and flushing that cannot otherwise be put down to a
concrete cause, can all be attributed to MSG.



    
        
            
        
    


Understanding MSG

MSG
is a fine white crystal substance that looks like salt. It is used as a
flavour-enhancer in many foods, especially in pre-made soups, broth,
bouillon, natural chicken flavouring, sauces, dressings, and processed
foods.

It is called an ‘excitotoxin’ or ‘neurotoxin’ by leading
neuroscientists because of its degenerative effects on the brain and
nervous system. Neurons are over stimulated to the point of exhaustion
and cell death. MSG first goes to the brain through membranes in the
mouth and throat, and also enters the blood stream as MSG laden foods
are digested. 

The problem with MSG is that some people experience adverse reactions within an 
hour after they taste it.

Research findings

A
1995 FDA-commissioned report acknowledged that an unknown percentage of
the population may react to monosodium glutamate and develop
‘monosodium glutamate symptom complex’, a condition characterized by
one or more of the following symptoms: 

•  Burning sensation/numbness in the back of the neck, forearms and chest 
•  Tingling, warmth and weakness in the face, temples, upper back, neck and 
arms 
•  Facial pressure or tightness 
•  Chest pain 
•  Headache 
•  Nausea 
•  Rapid heartbeat 
•  Drowsiness 
•  Weakness 
•  Sweating

A
2002 report from researchers at Hirosaki University in Japan found rats
fed on diets very high in glutamate (up to 20%) suffered eye damage.
Lead researcher Hiroshi Ohguro said the findings might explain why, in
eastern Asia, there is a high rate of normal-tension glaucoma. 

Effects of MSG

Besides the above mentioned effects, the following show MSG’s dire health 
consequences:  

• •  
Obesity is one of the most consistent effects of excitotoxin exposure
and is a growing problem that knows no age or sex boundaries. MSG
triggers an insulin/adrenalin/fat storage/food craving response. This
depletes serotonin levels which trigger headaches, depression, fatigue,
and leads to more food cravings. 

• •  
Asthma, which was on the decline until the mid-eighties, now shows a
100% increase in the death rate among children and seniors. Incidence
has increased 600% in the last 10 years. The FDA recognizes that
‘uncontrollable asthma’ can be caused by MSG.

• •  
MSG is a known ‘mutagen’ (mutates fetuses) and causes significant
damage to intellectual development, growth patterns, reproduction and
gonadal functions. 

• •   Lab studies show
devastating effects on brain development including dyslexia, autism,
schizophrenia, violent episodes, panic attacks, seizures, depression
and even cerebral palsy! Humans are five times more sensitive to MSG
than other mammals. 

Avoiding MSG

1  Ask the servers at restaurants to have the chef omit MSG from your meal.

2  Avoid
these food additives, which always contain MSG: hydrolysed vegetable
protein, hydrolysed protein, plant protein extract, sodium caseinate,
yeast extract, textured protein and hydrolysed oat flour.

3  The
following additives frequently contain MSG: Malt extract, malt
flavouring, natural flavouring, natural chicken flavouring, seasoning
and spices.

4  Be wary of these additives,
which may contain MSG: enzymes, soy protein concentrate, soy protein
isolate and whey protein isolate. 

5  Contact the distributors of foods containing the above additives to see 
whether they contain MSG. 

Effect on children 

Thousands
of packaged foods, ginger pastes, garlic pastes, dips, curry paste,
chili sauces, pickles, packaged soups, stock cubes, packaged snacks
like chips, crackers, etc., including many so-called health foods
contain MSG in considerable amounts. Packaged foods designed for
children tend to be especially high in MSG. 

MSG has been shown
to cause lesions on the brain, especially in children. These lesions
cause cognitive, endocrinological and emotional abnormalities. In
children excess glutamate affects the growth cones on neurons. MSG
could seriously affect cognitive skills in children and cause learning
difficulties. It also causes anxiety and hyperactivity leading to ADH. 

The MSG myth 

It
is a myth that MSG is restricted only to Chinese cuisine. MSG is
frequently used in all kinds of restaurants, even Indian joints. In
fact, down south, some restaurants have been asked to add it to sambars
just to add a different texture to it! Restaurants are notorious for
using it, out of habit and lack of knowledge about it. The processed
food industry, however, is using it with full knowledge of its making
and effects. 

So, whenever you can, read your labels and be aware! 
 
Group Moderator for  
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
Connect your World with Us join Now - 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dimpill_gang/join  
  
Affiliated group from dimpill_gang for Only Adult Mails - 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/fantazies/join 
 
Affiliated group from dimpill_gang for Only Health and Food Mails -  
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Health_and_Gourmet/join




      Save all your chat conversations. Find them online at 
http://in.messenger.yahoo.com/webmessengerpromo.php

Reply via email to