
J Environ Pathol Toxicol. 1980 Jun-Jul;3(5-6):387-95.
The biological properties of aspartame. V. Effects on a variety of
physiological parameters related to inflammation and metabolism.
Aspinall RL, Saunders RN, Pautsch WF, Nutting EF.
Aspartame (APM), L-aspartyl-L-phenylalanine methyl ester, is a low calorie
sweetening agent 180 times sweeter than sucrose. As part of a series of
studies designed to determine the potential effects of ingestion of excesses
of APM on a wide spectrum of physiological processes, experiments were conducted
in which high multiples (mg/kg basis) of the projected maximum daily human intake
(20 mg/kg) were administered intragastrically to laboratory rats. Doses up to
16 times the maximum intake had no effect on inflammation parameters including
carrageenin-induced paw edema, connective tissue formation and adjuvant
arthritis. APM, likewise, showed no antihistamine activity in vitro. Even
higher multiples (up to 103 times) of the maximum intake had no effect on
various parameters of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. These results
indicate that APM ingested in great excess would not be expected to significantly
impair inflammatory processes nor influence carbohydrate and lipid metabolism.