T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1147.1 | salt | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Fri Sep 27 1991 12:18 | 4 |
| Well, for one thing, MSG is monosodium glutamate, which means it's
a salt.
--bonnie
|
1147.2 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Sep 27 1991 12:31 | 10 |
| Well, it's not really a salt, but it does contain sodium, which is what's
in regular salt that's usually a problem. "Salt" is used for chloride
compounds (and those of similar elemental combinations).
I know that MSG exposure can cause MSG sensitivity in people; it seems to me
that it makes sense to avoid it where you can during pregnancy. Most
restaurants which use it encourage you to ask to omit it, and more and more
don't use it at all.
Steve
|
1147.3 | MSG=Soybean | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Fri Sep 27 1991 15:04 | 3 |
| A cooking program (The Frugal Gourmet) said MSG is a soybean product,
and perfectly natural. For those that are sensitive, avoid it (just
like avoiding strawberries).
|
1147.4 | canned foods | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Fri Sep 27 1991 15:24 | 11 |
| Its becoming hard for me to stomach preparing food in the kitchen,
and so going through canned/processed foods in the grocer's I noticed
that many of them (and I was surprised!) have MSG on the list of
ingredients.
Many chinese food places now advertise no-msg meals or menus. I
have not read much in the way of warning for pregnant women to
avoid it, but like everything else, its moderation that should be
the rule.
Monica
|
1147.5 | | MIVC::MTAG | | Fri Sep 27 1991 15:38 | 6 |
| I avoided MSG while pregnant, although my midwife didn't say anything
about it. I do have one friend who's doctor said *no* MSG while she
was pregnant. You might want to check with your doctor.
Mary
|
1147.6 | Headaches!! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Fri Sep 27 1991 16:58 | 17 |
| MSG (sold as the brand name "Accent") gave me a tremendous, very sudden
onset headache when I was pregnant. We had been to one of the Fast
food joints on Route 9 in Westboro and aparently the lettuce on the
salad bar was treated with MSG-we think. Perhaps I'm wrong, but isn't that
the stuff that keeps the lettuce on the salad bar from turning brown?
The pain was so intense that I had to make an emergency call to my
internist and OB and get a prescription for codein. I was literally
holding my head and screaming it was so bad. I have had salad from
that place since, non pregnant state, and have had no reaction.
It has been linked to severe headaches, I believe it might constrict
blood vessles which could cause sever headache. Seems to me 20/20 or
60 minutes did a program about hidden MSG and other chemicals in food a
couple years ago. The report didn't look pleasant.
Lyn
|
1147.7 | Sulfites, not MSG? | NIMBUS::HARRISON | Icecreamoholic | Fri Sep 27 1991 17:04 | 4 |
| I believe that you're referring to sulfites, which is what some
restaurants use to keep lettuce from browning.
Leslie
|
1147.8 | Thanks, it must be sulfites | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Fri Sep 27 1991 17:16 | 10 |
| Thanks for the clarification Leslie. I must have been reacting to the
sulfites on lettuce. But have still experience some extremely bad
headaches after eating chinese food. Kind of a pressure on my temples,
and occational light headedness. I have heard MSG linked to seizures,
in extreme cases of course, through a couple of my training courses
with the ambulance service. Not to start a panic on this, but just
relating some "advice of the experts".
Lyn
|
1147.9 | headaches | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Fri Sep 27 1991 17:49 | 15 |
| both sufites and MSG have been quite often linked to headaches;
is something that's on the list of foods that can cause migraines.
Lyn, I am not surprised that you had that headache when you were pregnant
(although I *REALLY* sympathize with you!), since migraines
are linked with hormones and their changes in the body, people often
get, or loose these symptoms after, or during pregnancy.
Yes, MSG *IS* a popular cause, although in my case its not something
that usually triggers them.
These additives can also cause allergy attacks.
Monica
|
1147.10 | | 4GL::GVRIEL::SCHOELLER | Schoeller - Failed Xperiment | Tue Oct 01 1991 12:53 | 10 |
| Besides the headaches, sulfites can trigger asthma attacks for those with asthma.
MSG can aggravate Meniere's (sp?) Disease, an inner problem resulting in dizzy
spells.
Jeff Smith frequently comments on the "naturalness" of MSG. My take on that is
that whiskey is a derivative of grain but one would never assume that has the
same effect as Wheaties.
Dick
|
1147.11 | MSG UPDATE | USAT02::HERNDONK | | Thu Nov 07 1991 13:10 | 44 |
|
Did anyone catch the 60 minutes segment on MSG?
It seems it is connected with severe headaches, wild mood swings,
etc. They interviewed one child that was diagnosed as having
ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder) and in reality it was a reaction
to MSG...
MSG is labeled and hidden in ingredients, such as:
Natural Flavors, Accent, Sodium Csomething (can't think of the name)
and a few other ingredients..i think flavor enhancers...
The products they talked about were like Ric-a-Roni, all campbell's
soups, gravy mixes, many more, basically, anything with Natural
Flavors....I had no idea that MSG was in almost everything.....Many
foods have several different resources of MSG within the one item.
One reason they use it in soup is because it is a flavor enhancer
and saves the companies money. Rather than needing 6 chickens for
chicken stock, they use 1 chicken and 3 lbs of MSG..... yuck!
They were trying to get the FDA to put some kind of regulation
on the use of MSG or at least the labeling and not have it hidden
in ingredients the way it is today.
Has anyone ever been tested for MSG reaction? Chinese food is
a very minor source of MSG compared to what we eat everyday.
If anyone remembers all the ingredients that contain MSG, please
post.
What about your kids? They talked about kids being out of control,
and dr's were diagnosing other diseases as a result. One woman
had severe abdominal pains...they removed her gall bladder and her
appendix and she still suffered...and it turns out it was a reaction
to MSG...one kid reads every label of everything looking for hidden
MSG...
I'm pregnant and it makes me kind of nervous to think that I'm ingesting
all this MSG when sometime in the 1980's, I think, it was banned
from baby food because it was unhealthy for children...
Kristen
|
1147.12 | Fast Food?? | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Thu Nov 07 1991 13:35 | 13 |
| I didn't actually see the show, I was doing the pre-bedtime routine.
What my husband said to me was something about "fast-food MSG"
hyperactivity. I presumed it meant too much McD's Burger King etc.,
in fact my comment was "he doesn't do the fast food joints often enough
to cause his kind of hyperactivity.
I don't do much of premade soups, etc. We give AJ frequent frozen dinner
during the winter months, usually it's Healthy Choice or Budget Gourmet
Lite brands, and I can't see MSG listed on those labels anywhere.
Comments??
Lyn
|
1147.13 | | USAT02::HERNDONK | | Thu Nov 07 1991 14:55 | 13 |
|
re: frozen dinners
Check for Natural Flavors...if it is listed it contains MSG...
no telling how much...
As far as fast-food...I don't remember them mentionioning McD's, etc
at all...
I wish I could remember all the ingredients that contain MSG
unknown to the consumer...
Kristen
|
1147.14 | Consider the source before you panic | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Nov 07 1991 15:38 | 8 |
| "60 Minutes" is a classic muck-raking show: lots of heat, little
light. Every week they have to find a villian, no matter how hard
they have to look or how much they have to distort the evidence.
Don't take them seriously as a source of information--it's just
an up-market version of 20/20 or Geraldo.
-John Bishop
|
1147.15 | I saw the program as well | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Thu Nov 07 1991 15:38 | 29 |
| As Kirsten mentioned, there are a number of popular chemical
compounds that while listed in the ingredients, never reveal what is
in THEM. Now, I feel somewhat ashamed to say that I too forgot most
of the ones they mentioned (a lot of use I am! ;-) )
I think we must keep this report in perspective though, Kirsten I am
under the impression that this has gotten you quite upset. I do believe
that 60Minutes' aim it to bring to light things that the general public
needs to know, or THEY feel the public needs to know.
I felt uneasy with this segment that while yes, I believe there is
something to say about seemingly obvious behavioural changes in
patients who have stopped using MSG in their diets, I STILL felt that
we weren't getting the whole picture, that the 60Minutes team was
there to bring the alarmist side of the story, and paint those who
denied it effects as lying fools.
Don't let this news freak you out -- we are ALL living in the same
culture (more or less) and eating much the same foods -- I would think
that most of the children I know that were born in the last 5 years
are healthy and happy, even those whose mothers have had wine, binged
on junk food, or even most of those whose parents smoke.
Again, I tend to think the jury is still out on this one (but I
would sure like better labelling or removal of the stuff too!!!)
Monica,
Still skeptical (either way)
|
1147.16 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Nov 07 1991 16:04 | 10 |
| There seems to be some truth to the statement that some people have a reaction,
allergic or otherwise, to MSG. If you want to see if your child's hyperactivity
is aggravated by MSG, why not eliminate MSG from his diet for a couple of weeks?
It's not that difficult to avoid fast food, TV dinners, packaged soups, and
other foods that are likely to contain MSG.
There are lots of theories about the causes of hyperactivity. Every once in
a while, some doctor claims that by avoiding some substance, some large number
of people can be "cured." I rate these doctors slightly above the ones with
miracle cancer cures.
|
1147.17 | hey, you eat a peck of dirt before you die | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Nov 07 1991 16:26 | 23 |
| I had a boss once who mentioned that he couldn't take MSG--had to call
ahead to Chinese restaurants to be sure they didn't use it, or that
they would withhold it from a serving on demand. When I asked "why--
what happens?" he said he got severe headaches and stomachaches from
it. At the time I thought "boy, some people have weird allergies," and
I also figured there was probably a connection between that
stereotypical "get stuffed on Chinese food and be hungry an hour later"
and MSG (the stuffed feeling may really be an MSG reaction).
When Alex and I tried a local Chinese restaurant for the first time,
then went on to grocery shopping, she complained of a severe
stomachache (with a 6-year-old's dramatic flair). I knew immediately
that this restaurant must have used massive quantities of MSG; I
explained it to her, wrote that restaurant off our list, watched her
pretty closely for the evening (tummyache diminished as I expected) and
concluded that she has a mild reaction to it.
She has no reaction to the MSG in Rice-a-Roni, snack foods, lemon
pepper seasoning, etc., so I'm not going to drive myself and everyone
else crazy poring over labels and restricting our diet maniacally.
(Which is worse, an MSG tummyache or a Momm who's a major pain?!)
Leslie
|
1147.18 | or something else? | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Thu Nov 07 1991 16:51 | 24 |
| re .-1
could Alex's stomachache have been caused by something else in
that chinese dinner?
A co-worker of mine just spent two amazing years - she first seemed
to be suffering from incredible fatigue, her daughters as well.
To make a long story short, after a lot of self education (on
allergys and vitamin defficiencies mostly) and a lot of specialists,
her diagnosis is Allergies to such things as yeast, as well as
lack of many vitamins. One of her daughters also had allergies
to corn (ANYTHING with cornstarch or cornoil!) and beef! These were
only diagnosed with a lot of time and effort and many specially
tailored allergy tests.
What I am getting at is MSG can be one of SEVERAL things that can
create discomfort or behavioural modification in a person. I will
not deny that some DO have to watch for MSG (their task is not
easy according to the 60 Minutes report) but they are NOT the only
ones. My friend tells me that grocery shopping for her and her
family is quite a drama now. Every label MUST be read.
And WHAT could they be missing, even if they are so diligent?
Monica
|
1147.19 | MSG and Asthma | MARVIN::DAVISON | Eric Davison | Fri Nov 08 1991 08:36 | 15 |
|
Several studies in Europe have identified strong links between asthma attacks
and large doses of MSG, such as found in some Chinese meals. In several cases
these have been fatal, more often they are temporarily incapacitating. Children
with asthma have been advised by hospitals and by the Asthma society (correct
name escapes me) to avoid MSG.
When I was in Australia for DECUS in 1989 I noticed several Chinese restuarants
with signs in the window saying that no MSG was used in any meals. It appears
that one or two child deaths had been linked with MSG consumption and that there
was a significant loss of trade until they publicly dropped MSG. I didn't notice
the headache I usually associate with eating Chinese, but then I normally have a
drink and it could just be low tolerance to Chinese beer/wine.
Eric
|
1147.20 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri Nov 08 1991 09:36 | 12 |
| re .18 - Monica, yes I'm sure Alex's stomachache could have been
caused by some other additive, but I do think the odds are
overwhelmingly in favor of the culprit being MSG. For one thing, we
shared the food and I had no reaction; I think I would have shown some
symptoms if it had been some really bizarre chemical. I have a cast-
iron stomach as far as most everyday American chemicals/potent
peppers/MSG levels go, and I just have a feeling that that restaurant
shoveled it in. (It *was* tasty food, and I've found that usually if
the stuff is really lip-smackin' good, monosodium glutamate is #2 or 3
on the label!--either that or garlic :-D )
Leslie
|
1147.21 | MSG/Asthma -- Sodium may be the culprit | POWDML::SATOW | | Fri Nov 08 1991 09:51 | 11 |
| re: .19
Some anecdotal, non-scientific, non-medical evidence -- When I am having an
asthmatic attack, I find that salt (or other high sodium things like soy
sauce) tend to make that attack worse. I have a friend, whose wife has severe
asthma attacks, who claims that there is a definite link between salt intake
and asthma.
MSG, of course, contains sodium.
Clay
|
1147.22 | Rice-a-roni | MLTVAX::HUSTON | Chris's Mom!! | Fri Nov 08 1991 10:49 | 10 |
| I never knew that Rice-a-roni had MSG until near the end of my
pregnancy. My friend was 3 months behind me and had told me her doctor
had advised against eating eat since it had MSG. Well, I ate
Rice-a-roni constantly with my pregnancy, and we had a perfect baby
boy. No effects there, and I never had any problems with it.
I guess it depends on your body, and what you can take.
Sheila
|
1147.23 | The List ... | MR4DEC::DERAMO | | Mon Dec 02 1991 12:54 | 39 |
| I happened to write down the list of ingredients that "60 Minutes" said
can contain MSG:
Sodium Casseinate
Autolyzed Yeast
Hydrolyzed Vegetable Protein
Natural Flavors
I am sensitive to MSG -- when I eat something containing it, I get a
light-headed tingling feeling. It's frustrating to have it at work,
because I can't concentrate. I (and my family) avoid prepared foods,
and do most of our cooking from basic ingredients.
I usually eat a salad at work every day, and choose mostly fresh items
and just vinegar for dressing. I often top my salad with the
cafeteria's homemade croutons. One day a couple of weeks ago, I went to
see the cafeteria manager after lunch -- I had an MSG buzz, and
suspected the croutons. He said he had made the croutons himself, and
that they contained only margarine and spices. So we went looking for the
culprit -- we checked the spice rack (garlic and onion powder -- fine)
refrigerator (feta cheese -- fine), and the stockroom (olives and sliced
beets were fine -- but what's this ... the tuna fish ... hydrolyzed
vegetable protein! That was it! Some of the cans in the stockroom
contained it; others didn't. So now I know to stay clear of canned
tuna (and all the salad dressings, and all the soups [MSG in the stock
base], and everything on the hot line ...).
By the way, a lot of the turkeys I saw at the supermarket this year
(both frozen and fresh) contained hydrolyzed vegetable protein. So the
centerpiece at many of our holiday gatherings probably contained MSG.
About two weeks before the "60 Minutes" segment on MSG, there
was an article in the Wall Street Journal about how the Glutamate
Manufacturers Association was planning to conduct "damage control"
public relations to counteract the expected response to the "60
Minutes" segment. The association has a powerful lobbying arm that is
impeding efforts to get clearer labeling of MSG-containing foods.
Today, it's legal to hide MSG in any of the ingredients listed at the
beginning of this note. The association would like to keep it that way.
|
1147.24 | MSG in homemade Chex Mix=HEADACHE for 3 days! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Mon Dec 02 1991 17:56 | 16 |
| The weekend before Thanksgiving we attended a social event, dancing and
homemade refreshments, mostly cheese, crackers and the "chex-mix", I
was drinking white wine, nothing excessive though. The next morning I
had a sick headache like I've never had before. Hubby was fine, and he
had had more wine than I had. This headache resisted everything I took
for it, and even Monday afternoon at work I was having chest
palpitations, tingling in my arms, feeling lightheaded etc. Just for
the fun(?) of it I stopped in the supermarket to glance at the recipie
for the chex mix, on the box, it called for some huge amount of salt
PLUS Accent (MSG) added in. Since I was eating more or the mix than
cheese and crackers, I can only blame that, especially since I was
filling this tiny plate from the bottom of the container. There are
also Nitrites(?SP) in some wines, but that wasn't the culprit, since I
had previously checked out the label when I bought it for personal use.
|
1147.25 | Can we get back to the pregnancy question? | LJOHUB::WESSELS | just another day | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:49 | 30 |
| I have to open up this subject again, due to the chaos it has caused in
our lives lately... As far as I can get from this note, there is
NOTHING conclusive about avoiding "incidental MSG" during pregnancy,
right?? I think it would be enough to avoid Chinese food and straight
spice-rack MSG ("Accent"), but after reading this, my wife wants to
avoid everything that says "natural flavors" on it!! Based on two
notes here, anecdotal of a "60 Minutes" report...
The replies here have variously identified "Chinese food headaches,"
which just about everyone can attest to (including me), asthma
aggravation, and some stomachaches related to high-MSG foods. One
noter cites a friend's doctor advising to avoid MSG during pregnancy.
And one of our books at home on super-careful pregnancy only says to
avoid it in Chinese food and on your spice rack.
However, will someone agree with me in saying that pregnant women do
not need to go crazy trying to avoid the ingredients on the "60
Minutes" list? At best, these only concern those who are extremely
MSG-sensitive? And that "Natural Flavors" (why the caps???)
does NOT == MSG all of the time, or even most of the time? I seem
to remember reading that "natural flavors" can refer to lots of
things, like the apple products used in most "blueberry" foods...
Does anyone have some data to back me up?
This subject is getting out of control in our house, based on
incomplete information. Shed some light if you can.
Thanks,
Brian W.
|
1147.26 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Apr 13 1992 16:41 | 2 |
| If your wife's really nervous about "natural flavors" including MSG, she can
always call or write to the manufacturer.
|
1147.27 | Does your wife feel comfortable with her doctor's views? | BSLOPE::BOURQUARD | Deb | Mon Apr 13 1992 19:08 | 19 |
| I'd recommend calling your doctor's office and asking them.
My doctor has not said a word about MSG. None of the literature I have
specifically mentions MSG. I'm now 25 weeks pregnant and I've eaten at
Chinese restaurants. I have never had an MSG headache, so I don't think
I'm particularly sensitive to the stuff.
But frankly, I'd rather take advice from my doctor than a notes conference
(or a TV show for that matter!).
Is there some way for your family to compromise on this? If I were convinced
(for whatever reason) that some ingredient was bad for the baby, I would be
*extremely* upset if someone were strongly encouraging me to eat it anyway.
If your wife buys the food and prepares the meals (not always the case I know, so
no flames please!), would it hurt you to do without MSG and whatever else it
is that she wants to avoid? Is there perhaps some other way to compromise
on this?
Good luck working this out!
|
1147.28 | | FDCV06::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Tue Apr 14 1992 10:04 | 11 |
| You can certainly request Chinese food to be prepared without the MSG -
most restaurants can do it for items except the appetizers, which tend
to be prepared in large batches.
My doctor's suggestion when I was pregnant was to skip Chinese food for
the most part during pregnancy - one or 2 meals of it might not have an
affect, but eating LOTS of MSG on a regular basis might..... so I had
one at the beginning, and one Chinese meal at the end of the pregnancy
:-)
|
1147.29 | I must have eaten a ton of it! | FUZZLE::ANDERSON | There's no such place as far away | Tue Apr 14 1992 10:47 | 15 |
| I am a Chinese food junkie. I ate it regularly throughout my
pregnancy, not only in restaurants, but prepared at home. I don't
remember ever getting a headache from it. But then again, I ate spicy
and hot meals (Thai, Mexican, Chinese) throughout as well. The running
joke was that my baby was going to want hot peppers in his formula.
The result of all this? A 10+ pound healthy boy who continues to
exceed the charts for height, and is pretty normal for weight. I of
course think he is the best baby in the world.
Everyone is different. If you have reactions to certain foods, avoid
them. If not, the stress of worrying about it is probably worse that
the food itself.
marianne
|
1147.30 | Call Dr. & take face values... | LJOHUB::WESSELS | just another day | Tue Apr 14 1992 13:38 | 22 |
| Thanks for the replies. I guess we need to call & ask our doctor.
We are both responsible for planning the menu/grocery list, and usually
shop together. I'm sorry if my reply sounded a bit hysterical; this is
why. It's almost impossible to find many foods that don't contain
"natural flavor" on the ingredients list, and I'm not convinced that
this always (or even usually) means MSG. (For instance, in breakfast
cereal?) I don't see anything in the previous replies which implies to
me that the "60 Minutes" report, for what it's worth, said this either.
{This becomes a "all chickens are birds, therefore, all birds are
chickens" argument, if you see what I mean...}
Naturally I am willing to compromise, and avoid anything that
explicitly contains MSG (or nitrates, or lots of salt, etc). I just
don't want to go through the grocery store reading label items and
saying, "What do they *really* mean by `water?' Is that spring water,
or New York City municipal water?" I am not ready to become a one-man
FDA.
Thanks again,
Brian W.
|
1147.31 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Apr 14 1992 14:53 | 3 |
| re .30:
BTW, NYC municipal water is probably better than most spring water.
|