Do these food additives damage the male body?

Do these food additives damage the male body?

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Men need to protect their testicles, penile and other organs against these very harmful additives…and no, it’s not just MSG…

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Does this food additive damage the male body?

People respond to pain in different ways because there are a number of different variables in our pain sensation pathways.

Pain science is still pretty mysterious…

And most of what we do know about pain comes from observation rather than from understanding the direct causes of pain.

But we do know that some compounds can increase or decrease our reaction to painful stimulus.

A new study in pain sensation shows that a common food additive may be cranking up the intensity of chronic pain disorders.

An America University team of researchers published this study the Journal Nutrition.

In Kenya, local populations were reporting high incidences of chronic pain.

Scientists decided to see if they could find a correlation between the high incidence of pain disorders and diet or water intake (dehydration).

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“Two small pilot studies were conducted in Meru, Kenya after community reports of high chronic pain in the region.”

First, the researchers set out to find how many people in the population were suffering from chronic pain disorders.

“A pain prevalence estimate was conducted among 89 subjects from random households.”

Of the people surveyed, a massive 60% suffered from chronic pain.

“Prevalence of chronic pain among 89 subjects surveyed was 60%.”

Then the researchers performed a second analysis among the people suffering from chronic pain.

The research team wanted to find out if these people were getting exposure to glutamate (MSG) or if they were at risk from dehydration.

“Widespread chronic pain subjects, recruited from the community, completed a demographic questionnaire, pain impact questionnaire, and one-week food/symptom diary.”

Based on the results of this questionnaire, the participants were put on a two-week intervention to see if there could be an improvement.

People at risk of dehydration were to drink more water and those with glutamate/MSG exposure were to avoid this food additive.

“Those who completed the diary were assigned to treatment groups based on their report of water/tea intake and their reported use of mixed spices with MSG.”

Both of those groups had a significant reduction in pain after only two weeks.

The researchers gave another group in the study the painkiller acetaminophen.

“The ‘water and alternative spices’ and ‘acetaminophen’ groups both experienced significant reductions in pain after 2 weeks, with the greatest percentage of subjects improving in the ‘water and alternative spices’ group.”

The study showed a correlation with spice mixes containing the common food additive glutamate/MSG and chronic pain conditions.

Removing this additive (MSG) may be helpful to people suffering from pain.

“This pilot data suggests an abnormally high prevalence of pain in Meru, Kenya, and that glutamate/MSG intake, combined with dehydration, may be contributing to chronic widespread pain in this region.”

Glutamate/MSG is an “excitotoxic” agent.

What’s that?

Well, that means it can damage or kill cells due to overstimulation.

And it’s in a lot of processed cheeses and flavorings…and soy sauce.

For decades, there has been a growing movement warning about the dangers of glutamate/MSG additives.

Because of the warnings against glutamate/MSG, many people try to avoid it.

Therefore, processed food manufacturers have come up with an almost endless number of alternative names for the flavoring.

There are dozens of alternative names for this controversial additive.

Watch out for this stuff on the ingredient list!

Some of the names are:

  • monosodium glutamate
  • hydrolyzed protein
  • protein isolate
  • protein extract
  • autolyzed yeast extract

If you wanted to try a glutamate/MSG elimination diet like the one used in this study, you would have to be very careful about checking all ingredients on packaged foods.

Hopefully, the results of this study will finally lead to a larger investigation of the health effects of MSG/glutamate.

You should always consult a healthcare professional about pain management and diagnosis.

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Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
Dietary correlates of chronic widespread pain in meru, Kenya http://www.nutritionjrnl.com/article/S0899-9007(18)30040-6/fulltext

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