Wednesday 20 February 2013

The 11 scariest ingredients in your food

Acesulfame Potassium (Acesulfame-K)

What It Is
A calorie-free artificial sweetener 200 times sweeter than sugar. It is often used with other artificial sweeteners to mask a bitter aftertaste.

Where You'll Find It
More than 5,000 food products worldwide, including diet soft drinks and no-sugar-added ice cream. Click here to discover The Strange Reason Diet Soda Makes You Fat.

What You Need to Know
Although the FDA has approved it for use in most foods, many health and industry insiders claim that the decision was based on flawed tests. Animal studies have linked the chemical to lung and breast tumors and thyroid problems.

Aspartame

What It Is
A near-zero-calorie artificial sweetener made by combining two amino acids with methanol. Most commonly used in diet soda, aspartame is 180 times sweeter than sugar.

Where You'll Find It
More than 6,000 grocery items including diet sodas, yogurts, and the table-top sweeteners NutraSweet and Equal. (Did you know that most flavored yogurt is a step above ice cream? Find out the 25 New Healthy Foods That Aren't.)

What You Need to Know
Over the past 30 years, the FDA has received thousands of consumer complaints due mostly to neurological symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, memory loss, and, in rare cases, epileptic seizures. Many studies have shown aspartame to be completely harmless, while others indicate that the additive might be responsible for a range of cancers.

If beating asthma with sweet potatoes sounds too good to be true, wait till you read these 14 crazy-sounding (but completely true) health tips!

Titanium Dioxide

What It Is
A component of the metallic element titanium commonly used in paints and sunscreens. The food industry adds it to hundreds of products to make overly processed items appear whiter.

Where You'll Find It
Processed salad dressing, coffee creamers, and icing.

What You Need to Know
Titanium is a mined substance that's sometimes contaminated with toxic lead. Plus, most white dressings (like creamy ranch) aren't great for you anyway. Both your health and your waistline will fare better if you go with an olive oil- or vinegar-based salad topper instead.

Dig Into Our Nutrition-label Decoder and Never Be Fooled by Cute Packaging Again

Glyphosphate

What It Is
The active ingredient in the popular week killer Roundup. It's used on corn and soy crops genetically engineered to withstand a heavy dousing of the chemical.

Where You'll Find It
Most nonorganic packaged foods containing corn- and soy-derived ingredients. Because it's a systemic herbicide, it's taken up by the plant - meaning you eat it.

What You Need to Know
Glyphosphate exposure is linked to obesity, learning disabilities, and infertility.

Butylated HydroxyAnisole (BHA)

What It Is
A petroleum-derived antioxidant used to preserve fats and oils.

Where You'll Find It
Beer, crackers, cereals, butter, and foods with added fats.

What You Need to Know
Studies have shown BHA to cause cancer in the forestomachs of rats, mice, and hamsters. The Department of Health and Human Services classifies the preservative as "reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen."

Interesterified Fat

What It Is
A semi-soft fat created by chemically blending fully hydrogenated and non-hydrogenated oils. It was developed in response to the public demand for an alternative to trans fats.

Where You'll Find It
Pastries, pies, margarine, frozen dinners, and canned soups.

What You Need to Know
Testing on these fats has not been extensive, but the early evidence doesn't look promising. A study by Malaysian researchers showed a 4-week diet of 12 percent interesterified fats increased the ratio of LDL to HDL cholesterol. Furthermore, this study showed an increase in blood glucose levels and a decrease in insulin response.

Red #3 (Erythrosine) and Red #40 (Allura Red)

What They Are
Food dyes that are orange-red and cherry red, respectively. Red #40 is the most widely used food dye in America.

Where You'll Find Them
Fruit cocktail, candy, chocolate cake, cereal, beverages, pastries, maraschino cherries, and fruit snacks. (Confused by now about what you can eat? We scoured the supermarket for the 125 Best Packaged Foods in America.)

What You Need to Know
The FDA has proposed a ban on Red #3 in the past, but so far the agency has been unsuccessful in implementing it. After the dye was inextricably linked to thyroid tumors in rat studies, the FDA managed to have the liquid form of the dye removed from external drugs and cosmetics.

Yellow #5 (Tartrazine) and Yellow #6 (Sunset Yellow)

What They Are
The second and third most common food colorings, respectively.

Where You'll Find Them
Cereal, pudding, bread mix, beverages, chips, cookies, and condiments.

What You Need to Know
Several studies have linked both dyes to learning and concentration disorders in children, and there are piles of animal studies demonstrating potential risks such as kidney and intestinal tumors. One study found that mice fed high doses of sunset yellow had trouble swimming straight and righting themselves in water. The FDA does not view these as serious risks to humans.

Castoreum

What They Are
Beaver anal gland juice. Really. Beavers combine it with their urine to mark their territory.

Where You'll Find It
Vanilla or raspberry flavoring in processed foods, labeled only as "natural flavoring."

What You Need to Know
It's beaver anal gland juice.

Additional research by Leah Zerbe and Amy Rushlow

Source: http://www.sott.net/article/258404-Top-9-scary-food-additives

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