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MSG May Be Linked to Weight Gain
2011-05-31
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MSG May Be Linked to Weight Gain
By Adam Marcus
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) May 27 - The flavor enhancer monosodium glutamate (MSG), most often associated with Chinese food and after-dinner headaches, may also be enhancing waistlines, a new study finds.
Researchers found that people who ingest more MSG are more likely to be overweight or obese. And the increased risk wasn't simply because people were stuffing themselves with calorie-rich MSG-laden foods. The link between high MSG intake and being overweight held even after accounting for the total number of calories people ate.
Ka He, a nutrition expert at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who led the study, said that although the risk of weight gain attributable to MSG was modest, the implications for public health are substantial. "Everybody eats it," He told Reuters Health.
MSG is one of the world's most widely used food additives. Although it tends to be more popular in Asian countries, Americans manage to get their share in processed foods, from chips to canned soups.
An American's typical daily intake of MSG is estimated to be only about 0.5 g, whereas estimates for Japan and Korea put average intakes anywhere between 1.5 and 10 g a day.
MSG is considered safe, but some people complain of headaches, nausea and other bad reactions it.
Several studies have examined the potential link between MSG and body weight, with conflicting results. Scientists have speculated that people may eat larger helpings of food with MSG because it just tastes better. Other evidence suggests that MSG might interfere with signaling systems in the body that regulate appetite.
In the latest research, published in the June issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, He and his colleagues followed more than 10,000 adults in China for about 5.5 years on average.
The researchers measured MSG intake directly by before-and-after weighing of products, such as bottles of soy sauce. They also asked people to estimate their intake over three 24-hour periods.
Men and women who ate the most MSG (a median of 5 g/day) were about 30% more likely to become overweight by the end of the study than those who ate the least amount of MSG (less than 0.5 g/day), the researchers found. After excluding people who were overweight at the start of the study, the risk rose to 33%.
Obesity is not as much of a problem in China as it is in the United States, which might suggest that MSG is not a significant culprit in weight gain. But the Chinese tend to be physically active, which might help offset the pound-producing properties of the additive, He said.
Why MSG and weight gain may be linked isn't clear, He added, but it may have something to do with the hormone leptin, which regulates appetite and metabolism. He's group found that people who consumed more MSG produced more leptin. "MSG consumption may cause leptin resistance," He said, so that the body cannot properly process the energy it receives from food. That could explain why people who ate more MSG gained weight regardless of how many calories they consumed.
But Ivan E. de Araujo, a Yale University neurobiologist who has studied the effects of MSG on leptin, was not convinced by the new findings.
Leptin is released by fat cells, so as people gain weight they have more leptin in their blood, Araujo said. The effect of MSG on leptin levels, then, may simply be a reflection of growing body mass.
The researchers suggest that prolonged exposure to high quantities of MSG may trigger leptin resistance by damaging the hypothalamus, but de Araugo calls that theory "rather speculative, given the current lack of direct evidence that" MSG in normal dietary amounts could produce a physical injury to that part of the brain.
Araujo said it's "somewhat intriguing" that moderate weight gain was only seen in the group with the very highest MSG intakes. People who consumed the most MSG also consumed the most salt in their diets, Araujo noted, which can itself cause water retention and weight gain.
For a follow-up study, He and his colleagues hope to see whether people who stop using MSG experience any health benefits attributable to the change in diet.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/kv9cvF
Am J Clin Nutr 2011.