[back] Stevia
Stevia
by Jon Barron
(NewsTarget) Let's be honest for a moment. There's no question that over the
years I've tweaked the FDA, Canadian, and European regulators for some of the
outrageously absurd positions they've taken when it comes to alternative health
and supplements. Then again, I've also praised them on those occasions that I
believe they've done the right thing. But of all their positions and all their
calls, none brings their credibility more into question than their position
regarding stevia. Understand, I have no investment in
stevia. I use it in a couple
of formulas, but it is hardly essential to what I do. That said, I believe that
an exploration of the regulators' position on stevia speaks volumes as to their
overall position on alternative health. So, without further ado...
http://www.newstarget.com/022234.html
What is stevia?
Stevia is a tropical plant native to South
America. Its extract has up
to 300 times the sweetness of
sugar. Although some people complain of its staying power in the mouth or
its sometimes licorice-like aftertaste, it is a popular natural alternative
sweetener. As a sweetener, it is low glycemic and has added benefits in
potentially helping to
control obesity,
enhance glucose tolerance, and
reduce blood pressure. You would think that with this kind of pedigree, it
would qualify as the perfect sugar substitute and be approved for use as an
alternative sweetener everywhere. You would be half right. It is widely used
throughout Asia (particularly
Japan) and South America -- not so in the US, most of Europe, and Canada,
where it is banned as a food additive. In the United States, and Canada it's
allowed as a supplement, but not in food. In Europe, it's only allowed as an
additive to animal feed.
This whole separation thing between food additives and supplements as seen in
the US and Canada is actually very nebulous -- and deliberately so. Although the
rulings as written by the various government agencies might appear clear,
government authorities choose to interpret them as the mood suits. A good
example is the recent censure of Celestial Seasonings teas. Celestial Seasonings
followed the letter of the law by labeling their Zingers tea an herbal
supplement and including a supplements facts panel on the label, but as it turns
out, that didn't matter. To quote from the
FDA notice,
"Notwithstanding your use of the term 'Herbal Supplement' to identify the
product and your use of a supplement facts label for
nutrition labeling, your
Zingers Tangerine Orange Tea is subject to regulation as a conventional food and
not a dietary supplement... Therefore, your stevia-containing Zingers Tangerine
Orange Tea is adulterated within the meaning of section 402(a)(2)(C) of the
Act."
To better understand the situation, let's take a more detailed look at stevia.
What are the studies that support it?
In fact, stevia has been studied extensively. In addition to the studies cited
above showing its benefits in regard to obesity, glucose tolerance, and high
blood pressure, there are numbers of other studies proving its safety. For
example, a
1991 study in Thailand found that even at doses 1,000 times normal human
dosage, hamsters demonstrated no difference in growth rate or sexual performance
-- even through three generations.
In 2004, researchers at the KU Leuven (Belgium) organized an international
symposium on " The
Safety of Stevioside." Scientists from all over the world who attended
concluded that stevioside is safe:
- Stevioside is not carcinogenic. On the contrary, studies in Japan have
proven that stevioside reduces breast
cancer in rats as well
as skin cancers in animals models.
- Stevioside is not absorbed by the human gut. Only bacteria of the colon
degrade stevioside to steviol. Part of this steviol is absorbed through the
intestine but is quickly metabolized to steviol glucuronide and excreted in
the urine. No free steviol is detected in the blood.
- Although steviol showed a weak mutagenic activity in one very sensitive
strain of bacteria, even high concentrations of oral steviol were harmless
(up to 2 g/kg body weight)!
What are the problematic studies?
So is everything rosy for stevia? Not necessarily. There have been some
problematic studies. For example:
- A 1984
study found that although stevioside was not cancer causing, steviol, a
metabolite of stevioside, is indeed mutagenic in the presence of a specific
metabolic activation system -- although subsequent studies have either not
found it so, or found the effect to be so low as to be insignificant (1,
2).
And again, as discussed earlier, any steviol that passes through the
intestinal tract is metabolized to steviol glucuronide and excreted in the
urine. In fact, some studies have shown that stevia may actually be
cancer preventive.
- There were also
studies that indicated stevia might negatively affect
fertility in rats,
but those studies were later refuted by
more reliable studies involving higher numbers of rats and more
controlled protocols. And this merely reinforces the results of numerous
other studies.
The bottom line is that there is no compelling evidence that stevia in any
reasonable dosage causes cancer. In fact, it is worth noting that the incidence
of cancer in Japan is very low, although stevioside has been used there for over
25 years. And as for the fertility issue, there is no meaningful
laboratory evidence that stevia has any effect on male or female fertility, nor
on the development or state of the fetus. And again, despite a quarter of a
century of use in Japan, there is no actual evidence of any negative effect on
fertility or any other aspect of health for that matter.
It should also be noted that all of the problematic studies have used purified
stevia at levels far, far, far higher than would ever happen in a normal human
diet. Is this important (after all, testing for mutagenic effects at high doses
is standard procedure)? The problem is that just because it's standard doesn't
make it meaningful. Keep in mind that even things that are healthy can become
deadly if taken in large amounts. For example, if you have 100 times the normal
dosage of protein each day, you will destroy your liver in short order. If you
have a 100 times the normal dosage of water, you will die in a single day -- in
a rather messy explosion.
The bottom line here is that all of the problematic studies have been conducted
on rats and hamsters with absurdly high doses. In the real world, stevia has
been in use with hundreds of millions of people throughout Asia and South
America for as much as a quarter of a century. We're talking billions of doses
and no sign of increased cancer or lowered fertility. If only the alternative
sweeteners that the
regulators allow could match that kind of track record.What are the
absurdities of the regulators' positions on sweeteners?
But all that aside, it would at least be understandable if the regulators played
with a fair deck and applied equal standards to all alternative sweeteners. But
they do not.Aspartame
- According to the FDA's own audit on
aspartame, the
Bressler Report, aspartame triggers
brain tumors,
mammary tumors, pancreatic tumors, ovarian tumors, pituitary adenomas,
uterine tumors, etc. A senior FDA toxicologist, the late Dr. Adrian Gross,
who tried to prevent the approval of aspartame, told Congress that it
violated the Delaney Amendment because it triggered brain tumors
(Congressional Record SID835:131 - 8/1/85).
- Aspartame has also been shown to trigger birth defects and miscarriages
-- not just if the mother uses it, but the father also.
- Before aspartame was approved in beverages in 1983, the National Soft
Drink Association created a THIRTY PAGE PROTEST (that was later read into
the Congressional Record) declaring that aspartame was NOT stable, and that
it could actually make unwary users FATTER!
The bottom line on aspartame is that its safety record and evaluation record do
not even come close to matching the safety of stevia. In fact, FDA's own
evaluation committees rejected aspartame. But in 1983, the Commissioner of
the FDA, Dr. Arthur Hull
Hayes, overrode his own committees and approved
NutraSweet (aspartame)
for soft drinks two months before leaving office. A couple of months later,
after he had retired from the FDA, he accepted a position as Senior Medical
Advisor to Burson Marsteller, the public relations firm that promoted NutraSweet
for G.D. Searle, NutraSweet's manufacturer -- at the rate of $1,000 per day. An
unfortunate coincidence, one might say.Sucralose
If you think that sucralose,
the new darling of the regulatory agencies, has better science behind it than
aspartame, you would be sadly mistaken. As
Dr. Mercola
points out, as of 2006:
- "Only six human trials have been published on sucralose. Of
these six trials, only two of the trials were completed and
published before the FDA approved sucralose for human
consumption. The two published trials had a grand total of 36
total human subjects…The longest trial at this time had lasted
only four days and looked at sucralose in relation to tooth
decay, not human tolerance."
In addition,
pre-approval research shows that sucralose causes up to 40% shrinkage of the
thymus gland and enlarges the liver and kidneys.
And, of course, high
fructose corn syrup, the number one sweetener used in the world today is a
health disaster.What lies in the future?
One has to wonder why aspartame, sucralose, and high
fructose corn syrup -- all
with proven major negative health effects -- are approved by regulatory agencies
in the US, Canada, and Europe and are currently in widespread use; whereas
stevia is not. Not to be cynical, but perhaps the companies behind aspartame,
sucralose, and high fructose corn
syrup (G.D. Searle, Royal DSM, Tate and Lyle, and ADM) have a political clout
that small independent stevia producers cannot muster for a non-patentable
natural sweetener.
If that's true, we can be fairly sure that we will never see stevia approved for
commercial use in Europe, Canada, and the US until one of those large corporate
entities finds a way to patent it. But wait! Forgive my cynicism!
Cargill and Coca Cola
are doing just that even as we speak! I think we can look forward to an approval
of stevia -- in a patented form -- in the not too distant future. Will this
version be safer? No, of course not. It will merely have a different name,
Rebiana. Oh yes, and Coke and Cargill will back it. In the world of nutrition
regulation, it appears that money talks... and real nutrition walks. It's enough
to give you high blood sugar, tiny thymuses, brain tumors, and shrunken sex
glands!Conclusion
I originally titled this article the Stevia Shibboleth. A shibboleth, as
described in the Bible, was a secret word used by the ancient Gileadites to
identify outsiders who were unable to pronounce the word correctly. In a sense,
we can see that stevia is being used as a shibboleth by regulatory agencies to
separate the insiders (the large commercial entities with major political
influence) from the outsiders (the purveyors of all-natural healthy products).
And just as the Gileadites put outsiders who failed the test to death, so it
would seem our regulators would do the same to manufacturers such as Celestial
Seasonings who fail the modern Shibboleth test and pronounce their sweetener:
stevia.
This article was originally written as a newsletter which is read by tens of
thousands of people in over 120 countries. Of those thousands of subscribers,
six have email addresses that carry the @fda.gov ID.
This particular issue was written for them -- and for the other handful of
subscribers who represent the European regulatory agencies.
Guys, as long as you approve aspartame, sucralose, and high fructose corn syrup
as healthy and refuse to allow stevia to be used, calling it unsafe, despite all
reasonable evidence to the contrary, you will have no credibility among thinking
people. It is tantamount to an open admission that approval has nothing to do
with safety -- only what's bought and paid for.
Since we're running a Biblical motif with our shibboleth reference, let's
conclude with another for our regulator friends. To paraphrase Moses, "Let my
stevia go!"
To see more articles like this, please visit our website at
http://www.jonbarron.org.
About the author
About Jon Barron and The
Baseline Of Health Foundation
Founder and Director of the Baseline of Health Foundation, Jon Barron has lead
much of the pioneering work in the study of nutrition, disease prevention, and
anti-aging for the last 40 years. He is editor and publisher of the Baseline of
Health Newsletter and the Barron Report, which are both read by thousands of
doctors, health experts, and nutrition consumers in over 140 countries.
Barron is also the author of one of the most acclaimed books of the last decade,
"Lessons from the Miracle Doctors," which can be downloaded for free from the
Baseline of Health Foundation's website. The concept behind Jon's book is that
the body is a series of interrelated systems, and that you are only as strong as
your weakest link. For example, you can take every vitamin and supplement in the
world and even eat perfectly healthy, but you won't have a strong immune system
if your colon is filled with stagnant fecal matter. Or, you can fast and take
enemas every day, but you won't be healthy if your liver is filled with fat and
toxic waste. Barron and his Baseline of Health Foundation recommend a time
tested health program that optimizes each and every functional system in the
body.
Jon Barron is recognized as one of the world's leading formulators of
nutritional products sold globally; however, his high-end, personal formulas are
sold exclusively at
www.BaselineNutritionals.com. Combining his knowledge with the latest
nutraceutical and herbal studies, Barron continues to develop cutting-edge
formulas for his company and clients. He even discovered the "Barron Effect," a
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stronger than previous extraction techniques. The results of his discoveries
have been verified in clinical studies. One of his products, Metal Magic,
recently proved effective in safely removing 87% of lead, 91% of mercury, and
74% of aluminum naturally from the body in 42 days. In another clinical study,
his Glucotor v.2 formula evidenced a 52% improvement in blood sugar utilization
and optimization.
Jon Barron currently serves on the Medical Advisory Board of the prestigious
Health Sciences Institute. For more information, visit
www.jonbarron.org.