Monosodium glutamate (MSG)

http://archpsyc.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/63/8/856

Basically that gives some credit to the theory that high levels of free glutamic acid (which is the metabolite of MSG) affects depression.

Im not in the hospital ATM and ive not got my account set up yet to let me onto the medical trial databases etc so I cant do a proper search, but simply theoretically knowing that glutamic acid levels affect dopamine and prolactin levels directly you should be able to see there will be a depressant affect, amongst others.

Hawker

Let me guess, you got that link from here

http://www.msgtruth.org/depress.htm
 
Yup :), the website mite be a load of drivel but factually what their saying is creditable, besides like I said I cant get onto a proper medical database atm, ive seen the evidence in other trials, that is 3 years out of date.

Hawker
 
:D

So no evidence and no statistical reports to back up a theory.

Just a test for something more or less unrelated on 18 subjects.

After reading that site for 10 seconds or so I'm pretty sure I'll eventually find evidence and a link of how MSG shot JFK
 
I wouldn't trust any government advice these days, they are too easily swayed by lobby groups. You only have to look at the copyright lobby group and see how much power they have. Didn't this government get caught with regards to motosport and cigarette advertising.

Wasn't smoking considered healthy? And all the scientists who had evidence it wasn't descredited. This isn't tin foil hat way of thinking, it is a realistic way of looking at the world without being a fool.

If you are going to use 'evidence' that claims such and such a thing is true, dig a little deeper and see who funding this. Recently the copyright lobby in Canada was funding numerous groups who all came to the same conclusion about how copyright was damaging the industry, despite evidence that the majority of those who downloaded actually bought MORE records then those who didn't.

Personally I avoid the stuff. Advice on items like these is often contridicted later on. Aspestos, Eggs, Thalidamine.

Two of those were deemed to be safe by scientific studies.
Eggs were deemed to be causing heart disease and cancers.

Go figure.

If you need to add MSG to a food to make it taste nice then you really need to learn how to cook properly.
 
Yup :), the website mite be a load of drivel but factually what their saying is creditable, besides like I said I cant get onto a proper medical database atm, ive seen the evidence in other trials, that is 3 years out of date.

Hawker

Well when you can, if you can post I would be very interested. As I can't find anything other than links back to that trial.
 
The Chinese have been using the stuff (natural and synthetic) for years without any problems

There's no hard evidence it's bad for you from anywhere, only half baked theories and hearsay
 
My parents has always used MSG to cook the food and it's great.

Few years ago people are claiming MSGs are bad for you. Rumours include how your hair would fall off if you put MSG into your food. Then alternative products were made to replace MSG, which is the powerded version of chicken stock extract, also a vegterian version of which contains the powdered extract of mushrooms.

The chicken version of this replacement turn out to be chicken bones that been grinded into powder. Most of the restaurants and takeaway that does not use MSG will be using this instead, which acts like a MSG anyways.

When my parents or any chinese family that use MSG in their cooking would only use 1/3 of a teaspoon in each dish, which compared to like half of tablespoon full of MSG used by restaurant chefs, hence the dish would usually be tastier
 
The Chinese have been using the stuff (natural and synthetic) for years without any problems

There's no hard evidence it's bad for you from anywhere, only half baked theories and hearsay

The Chinese haven't been able to afford it until relatively recently. I think you mean the Japanese.

As I said earlier, if you need to add MSG to a product it's because

a) the food tastes of nothing without it.
b) you cannot cook properly.

The reason MSG is added to some many convience food is due to a) and it is the same reason the Japanese add it to so many of their dishes.

Do you know what would happen if you ate a convience meal without MSG? It would most likely taste revolting, or you would be able to taste all the sugar and salt.

How you seen how much salt is in food these days? 6g is supposed to be the max limit. MSG adds to the salt levels in food. MSG is not safe as it contains sodium which is the issue with a high salt intake.

MSG does have an effect on unborn animals. Does the placenta prevent MSG from crossing into the neonatal bloodstream? if it doesn't, then a lot your children are going to have serious health issues due to MSG.

Still half baked? Think again.
 
When my parents or any chinese family that use MSG in their cooking would only use 1/3 of a teaspoon in each dish, which compared to like half of tablespoon full of MSG used by restaurant chefs, hence the dish would usually be tastier

In this respect MSG is propably a lot safer than using salt due to reduced amount you need to flavour the dish. Unfortunately, as you correctly pointed out, restaurants load their dishes with it. As do the convience meal industry.

I accept using MSG as a substitute for salt.
 
^^
cool

Ripe cheese is full of glutamate, as are tomatoes. Parmesan, with 1200mg per 100 grams, is the substance with more free glutamate in it than any other natural foodstuff on the planet. Almost all foods have some naturally occurring glutamate in them but the ones with most are obvious: ripe tomatoes, cured meats, dried mushrooms, soy sauce, Bovril and of course Worcester sauce, nam pla (with 950mg per 100g) and the other fermented fish sauces of Asia.

Your mate, Marmite, with 1750mg per 100g, has more glutamate in it than any other manufactured product on the planet - except a jar of Gourmet Powder straight from the Ajinomoto MSG factory. On the label, Marmite calls it 'yeast extract'. Nowhere in all their literature does the word 'glutamate' appear. I asked Unilever why they were so shy about their spread's key ingredient, and their PR told me that it was because it was 'naturally occurring ... the glutamate occurs naturally in the yeast'.
 
How you seen how much salt is in food these days? 6g is supposed to be the max limit. MSG adds to the salt levels in food. MSG is not safe as it contains sodium which is the issue with a high salt intake.

MSG does have an effect on unborn animals. Does the placenta prevent MSG from crossing into the neonatal bloodstream? if it doesn't, then a lot your children are going to have serious health issues due to MSG.

Still half baked? Think again.

Yes the placenta stops it.
And no animals do not suffer from it. Mice do. They have a different reaction than humans and most other animals.

So yes it is half baked at best.
 
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