here is your famous article
http://www.cspinet.org/new/pdf/aspartame912.pdf
this is done.. this done.. etc etc..
no detailed charts, explanations, notes.. believe me I can prepare a report like that just by copy pasting for free
Again you fall prey to the google search and fail to read things properly. The first word on the article below the authors names states "Evaluation summary". Hence why there are no charts, explanations or notes. It is a summary, not the full text. Does that make sense?
So, if you want the actual full article on the internet, you have to pay for it. Or else access it via a library. The full article is available via this link:
http://informahealthcare.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/10408440701516184or
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/apl/btxc/2007/00000037/00000008/art00002?token=00521a3682c5db372c275c277b42572b67474828345f44236e59592f653b2a2d3a7c4e7247700b8626They are not cheap, cost about $50 to purchase. And that will provide you with detailed analysis notes, charts and explanations as you wish to see. I cannot share the full article with you because the service I use to access such literature prohibits me from freely distributing such information.
I am not denying the fact that there may be new evidence in the future. Not at all. All I am saying is that the Aspartame hoax has been going around for more than 20 years and there is a good body of evidence (if you can access it) to suggest that so far it is safe. In fact it has been studied more extensively than something like Stevia plant extract. Yet, people are happy to use Stevia without any evidence, yet condemn Aspartame when there is good evidence that it is safe.
If I have to access the latest research available for my field of expertise, it costs me around £300 - £500 in annual subscriptions. But this information is validated and peer reviewed. So as accurate as possible. Not perfect, not set in stone, but as uptodate and accurate as possible. Free information(medical) on the internet is often opinions, personal experiences and myth. Sometimes health scares/hoaxes. So do not believe all you read, unless you can peruse the evidence yourself. Worse still, dont scare others. A good example being the MMR scare or hoax. Unfortunately driven by a single medical person. Not so different to the way Dr Kim and Dr Whatshisname write on their websites. The UK is suffering for the healthcare hoax that was the so called link between MMR and Autism. For years doctors tried to convince people about the fact that it was a hoax, but people chose not to listen and now we have a resurgence of adult measles.
of 90 independant studies 83 identified a problem
Could I have a link to one of these so call studies that identified a problem. I am willing to look into it in detail. And if the study is genuine, then I can access full articles via the service I currently use.
I ask because I use a aspartame/sucralose in lieu of sugar to reduce my risk of diabetes. And I spent a lot of time researching it before switching over.