2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2009.03221.x
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Monosodium glutamate ‘allergy’: menace or myth?

Abstract: Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is a salt form of a non-essential amino acid commonly used as a food additive for its unique flavour enhancing qualities. Since the first description of the 'Monosodium glutamate symptom complex', originally described in 1968 as the 'Chinese restaurant syndrome', a number of anecdotal reports and small clinical studies of variable quality have attributed a variety of symptoms to the dietary ingestion of MSG. Descriptions of MSG-induced asthma, urticaria, angio-oedema, and rhinitis ha… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…Since the FASEB evaluation [33], a newer double-blind, multi-centre epidemiology study failed to demonstrate any reproducible responses to 5 g of MSG when administered during the course of a meal [35]. Likewise, the review by Williams and Woessner [36] re-iterated previous conclusions that no evidence of symptoms has been associated with the consumption of up to 3 g of MSG per meal. They further state that symptoms have occurred with MSG doses in the 3-5 g (as a single bolus) range, but only in the absence of food on an empty stomach.…”
Section: Hazard Identification and Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Since the FASEB evaluation [33], a newer double-blind, multi-centre epidemiology study failed to demonstrate any reproducible responses to 5 g of MSG when administered during the course of a meal [35]. Likewise, the review by Williams and Woessner [36] re-iterated previous conclusions that no evidence of symptoms has been associated with the consumption of up to 3 g of MSG per meal. They further state that symptoms have occurred with MSG doses in the 3-5 g (as a single bolus) range, but only in the absence of food on an empty stomach.…”
Section: Hazard Identification and Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The absence of any adverse effect at such high dietary Table 1. Overview of human studies on MSG considered adequate by the EFSA [2] Reference Study design and result [39] 5,000 mg MSG in a meal: no evidence for symptoms in humans [40] Sensitive subjects (5,000 mg) double blind placebo-controlled double-blind study (0/1,250/2,500/5,000 mg) in citrus beverage: frequency reported symptoms show dose-response and NOAEL at 1,250 mg [35] Multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple-challenge study in 5,000 mg sensitive subjects; dose-response (0/1,250/2,500/5,000 mg citrus flavored beverage) and significant response at all dose levels but not reproducible; no response when 5,000 mg MSG dosed in a meal [36] Review: data till that time: no symptoms up to 3,000 mg and in a meal 3,000 up to 5,000 mg: symptoms observed especially on an empty stomach Risk Assessment Glutamate dose levels of 5% in the diet illustrates the difficulties in defining adequate points of departure for risk assessment for macronutrients from studies in laboratory animals, since this would require even higher dose levels than 5% in the diet which might result in nutritional and metabolic imbalances that would yield secondary adverse effects, including weight loss and increased mortality [1]. The 90-day and 2-year chronic toxicity studies did not indicate potential neurotoxic effects.…”
Section: Hazard Identification and Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pastaraisiais metais atliekama gana daug Glu kaip maisto priedo tyrimų [63,64,65]. Tiriami Glu metabolizmo bei skonio fiziologiniai aspektai, saugumas ir galimas žalin-gas poveikis [28,66,67,68,69,70].…”
Section: Maisto Priedas Glutamatas -Maistinis Pagardasunclassified
“…N. Williamsas ir K. M. Woessneris literatūros apžval-goje "MNG alergija: grėsmė ar mitas?" paneigė, kad MNG yra visų minėtų simptomų ar ligų paūmėjimų priežastis [65].…”
Section: Maisto Priedas Glutamatas -Maistinis Pagardasunclassified
“…In 1968, Kwok 15 reported a possible link between MSG and "Chinese restaurant" syndrome including symptoms of numbness, weakness, and heart palpitations [9]. Since then, a range of studies have claimed an association between MSG and health outcomes, including asthma, diabetes, obesity, and allergic rhinitis [10][11][12]. Glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter that is intimately involved with sleep-wake states [13], and has been 20 shown to activate a number of brain areas [14], for example the insular cortex, anterior cingulate gyrus, and amygdala [15] which play a crucial role in the central regulation of the autonomic nervous system.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%