by Patricia Thornton » Mon Nov 20, 2006 7:52 pm
I agree with Dougal that doseage and reaction are very important factors in this discussion, but I think the important question and one never gets to an answer to is that raised by Jenny's post; why does her nephew react to a certain fizzy drink in the way he does? I do not believe it is necessarily related to E numbers.
My nephew's younger son suffers terribly from various food intolerances; he's 8 years old and I cannot start to remember the huge list of things he can't eat but I do know he has never tasted chocolate, fizzy drinks, nuts and lots of the other things I enjoyed as a child (even with rationing).
This boy, ironically, was born in Japan, the country where MSG (E621), perhaps the most discussed E number, was first discovered in seaweed; a country where people live longer than us in the west, a country where food intolerance is virtually unknown, a country where several types of cancer (until recently) were extremely rare or unknown, a country that (until recently) did not eat dairy products or red meat. Might it not be just as easy to blame the readily availablity of these things for the apparently recent increased incidence of reactions to certain foods as anything else?
Patty