
Effect of Repeated Ingestion of
Aspartame-Sweetened Beverage on Plasma Amino Acid, Blood methanol, and Blood
Formate Concentrations In Normal Adults
Lewis D. Stegink, L.J. Filer, Jr, Edward F. Bell, Ekhard E. Ziegler, and Thomas R. Tephly
Aspartame (APM) is a widely
used dipeptide sweetener (L-aspartyl-L-phenylalanine methyl ester). It has been
suggested that excessive use of APM might elevate plasma aspartate,
phenylalanine, and/or methanol concentrations to levels that are potentially
harmful. Six normal young adults ingested eight successive servings of
unsweetened and APM-sweetened beverage at one-hour intervals in a balanced
crossover design. In one part, the beverage was not sweetened. In the other,
each serving of beverage provided 600mg APM, a dose equivalent to the amount
provided by 36oz of APM-sweetened diet beverage. Plasma aspartate concentration
was not significantly increased after ingestion of unsweetened or APM-sweetened
beverage. Similarly, ingestion of the unsweetened beverage had no significant
effect on plasma phenylalanine concentration. However, ingestion of APM-sweetened
beverage significantly increased plasma phenylalanine levels 1.41 to 2.35 umol/dL
above baseline 30 minutes after ingestion. Plasma phenylalanine values reached a
steady state after administration of four to five servings and did not exceed
normal prostprandial values at any time. Blood methanol and formate
concentration remained within normal limits. The data indicate ready metabolism
of APM when administered at levels that may be ingested by normal individuals
who are heavy users of diet beverages.
Metabolism, Vol 38, No 4 (April), 1989: pp 357-363