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Post by Indespectus on Jul 3, 2018 6:10:57 GMT
I would like to post this link here if I may, because I received an insta-ban when I attempted to post it on glp. I tried to post it under the thread about aspartame, as this link very much establishes the connection between aspartame and neurotransmitters (serotonin, dopamine, gaba, acetycholine) and imo directly explains much of the rise in mental health problems since the 1980's when it was first approved for the market. (coincidentally around the same time as the introduction of the many various psych drugs) www.drclaudiaanrig.com/research/Sweeteners/Direct%20and%20indirect%20cellular...%20European%20Journal%20of%20Clinical%20Nutrition%20(2008)%2062,%20451-462.pdf I would like to see this knowledge spread.
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Post by Indespectus on Jul 3, 2018 6:14:09 GMT
Long link, so you will have to copy/paste it in. Sorry it doesn't work as clickable.
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Post by Indespectus on Jul 3, 2018 6:21:34 GMT
I'm sorry. Perhaps I should have posted this on the general psychology board. The mod may move it if she likes.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 5, 2018 21:38:11 GMT
Long link, so you will have to copy/paste it in. Sorry it doesn't work as clickable. I get 404 - would you link again? Should it work then, I would embed it 'pretty'
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 5, 2018 21:41:14 GMT
Nasty stuff. It was introduced to Europe as 'Nutrasweet' during the 1980s.
I gave it a try it and it was disgusting, tasted like complications.
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Post by Indespectus on Jul 6, 2018 5:29:43 GMT
A big problem in the US is that they "sneak" it into 1000's of marketed foods now. All chewing gum in the US now has aspartame or a similar artificial sweetener now, for example. I believe that the use is directly proportional to the huge rise in psychiatric problems and suicides in the US. Here is another link for the the study which was Published 2008 in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition: www.nature.com/articles/1602866
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