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ABSTRACT
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2007) 61, 304313
Consensus Meeting: Monosodium Glutamate An Update
K. Beyreuther, H. K. Biesalski, J. D. Fernstrom, P. Grimm, W. P. Hammes, U.
Heinemann, O. Kempski, P. Stehle, H. Steinhart, R. Walker
Objective:
Update of the Hohenheim consensus on monosodium
glutamate from 1997: Summary and evaluation of recent
knowledge with respect to physiology and safety of monosodium glutamate.
Design:
Experts from a range of relevant disciplines received and
considered a series of questions related to aspects of the topic.
Setting:
University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany.
Method:
The experts met and discussed the questions and arrived at a consensus.
Conclusion:
Total intake of glutamate from food in European countries is
generally stable and ranged from 5 to 12 g/day (free: ca. 1 g,
protein-bound: ca. 10 g, added as flavor: ca. 0.4 g). L-Glutamate
(GLU) from all sources is mainly used as energy fuel in enterocytes.
A maximum intake of 16.000 mg/kg body weight is regarded as safe. The
general use of glutamate salts (monosodium-L-glutamate and
others) as food additive can, thus, be regarded as harmless for
the whole population. Even in unphysiologically high doses GLU will
not trespass into fetal circulation. Further research work should,
however, be done concerning the effects of high doses of a bolus
supply at presence of an impaired blood brain barrier function. In
situations with decreased appetite (e.g., elderly persons) palatability
can be improved by low dose use of monosodium-L-glutamate.
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