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Aspartame


21 years ago 0 274 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Is it true that the medications given for depression / anxiety are somewhat like speed?
21 years ago 0 117 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
The psychosomatic effect is just as powerful though. Remember that most people do not experience any negative reaction as a result of allergies to common products such as diet soft drinks. If you believe that something will get you up tight, then it probably will. A tendency to blame unrelated physical causes on our anxiety and panic can lead to agoraphobia, so its important to be warey of this also. On the other hand, if you read some of the stuff I have posted about air swallowing, it is proven that many of us tend to swallow more air when anxious, which can lead to a bloated stomach and chest, which can give a sensation of laboured breathing. This can cause you to overbreath and thus induce hyperventilation, and thus be a physical trigger for panic. Carbonated soft drinks can cause a similar effect in some people. I personally dont have much of a problem with them, so long as I burp after drinking them that is :) As for caffeine, this definitely gets some people more keyed up than normal and can increase anxiety. If you are on luvox (fluvoxamine), more specifically, it is scientifically proven that the duration and intensity of caffeine is magnified by around 5 times on a standard 100mg dosage. This means if you have a cup of coffee you are actually having 5, and 2 cups, 10. You can imagine how that must feel!
21 years ago 0 42 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
I do not know about aspartame, there may well be people with a sensitivity to it. I recently read an article about caffiene as an anxiety accelarator. Then my therapist confirmed it. Supposedly it can persist in the system for over 20 hours after that soda is forgotten. I am giving up caffiene to see if it helps. Maybe aspartame is a worthwhile experiment for you. Thank you for sharing your experience.
21 years ago 0 40 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Rose, That makes perfect sense. You know, ever since I have had anxiety and panic, I can not drink caffeine. One morning I forgot to get decaf (I'm used to the donut shop making it for me :)) and all day long I was so wired and felt like ****. Like I was on edge all day. It really sucked. Sometimes I think that the sugar and the caffeine we intake has alot to do with how we feel. It probably affects us more since we have the disorder more than it does other people who do not. Also, I am beginning to believe that the medication is balancing me out on my seratonin (spell?) and now when I have caffeine it is disrupting that balance. I don't know. Just a thought. -Misty
21 years ago 0 8 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
The past three anxiety attacks I have had were immediately after drinking a diet soda or chewing gum with aspartame in it. They were a lot different than my usual panic attack that last only for 10 to 20 minutes because in these three my heart race rapidly for seven hours. I have been reading about aspartame and read that aspartame is 50% Phenylalanine, 40% Aspartic acid, and 10% Methanol. Excessive levels of phenylalanine in the brain have been shown to cause serotonin levels to decrease. This can lead emotional disorders such as depression.

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