Found in more than 5,000 foods and drinks, aspartame is far sweeter than sugar and now considered a 'possible carcinogen.' Common foods and drinks with aspartame include:
However, a second WHO group, the Expert Committee on Food Additives, did not change its threshold for the daily amount of aspartame that is safe to consume: 40 milligrams for adults who weigh about 154 pounds — the amount in around 14 cans of Diet Coke. The Food and Drug Administration has a“It’s a slight warning to people, but it’s not ‘do not consume,’” Barry Popkin, a professor of nutrition at the University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health, said of the WHO decision.
The WHO placed aspartame in a risk category below two others: “carcinogenic to humans” and “probably carcinogenic.”in the “possible carcinogen” category include aloe vera, pickled vegetables and nickel. Past research on aspartame’s link to cancer has not yielded conclusive evidence that it causes the disease, and many studies investigating links between cancer and artificial sweeteners have relied on animals, not humans, Popkin said., for example, found an increased incidence of leukemia and lymphoma in mice that consumed aspartame — but the doses were almost quadruple the weight of the mice, Popkin said, which makes them a poor point of reference for human risk.
Argentina Últimas Noticias, Argentina Titulares
Similar News:También puedes leer noticias similares a ésta que hemos recopilado de otras fuentes de noticias.
WHO decision on aspartame could hurt diet soda sales or lead to new drink formulasCoca-Cola, PepsiCo and Keurig Dr Pepper may decide to change their formulas and swap out aspartame for another sweetener.
Leer más »
How aspartame made the agenda of the WHO's cancer research armThe imminent move to label aspartame as a possible carcinogen comes after years of advocacy from a leading consumer group in the United States and a handful of cancer scientists hoping to settle a decades-long debate over the sweetener's safety.
Leer más »
Aspartame may cause cancer, global health body saysBreaking news: The World Health Organization’s cancer research arm has labeled aspartame a “possible carcinogen,” casting new doubts on the safety one of the world’s most common artificial sweeteners.
Leer más »
Aspartame is possibly carcinogenic, according to WHO’s cancer-research agencyAmounts typically consumed don’t raise major safety concerns, but more research is needed, WHO official says
Leer más »
WHO says soda sweetener aspartame may cause cancer, but it's safe within limitsThe International Agency for Research on Cancer identified a possible link between aspartame and a type of liver cancer called hepatocellular carcinoma.
Leer más »
Aspartame advice unchanged despite cancer questionThe sweetener is found in a variety of foods, from diet drinks to chewing gum and some yoghurts.
Leer más »