For French Fry/Potato Chip/Starcy Carb addicts - FWIW

K60

Cathlete
[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON Apr-24-02 AT 10:30AM (Est)[/font][p]I haven't eaten a potato chip or french fry in ten years, just don't like them. But I may stop eating cereal. Half of my reason for wanting to lose weight is I'm a big chicken when it comes to doctors and hospitals and I want to avoid both for the rest of my life.

Cancer Risk Found in French Fries, Bread
Wed Apr 24,10:26 AM ET
By Peter Starck

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Basic foods eaten by millions around the world such as bread, biscuits, potato chips and french fries contain alarmingly high quantities of acrylamide, a substance believed to cause cancer, Swedish scientists said on Wednesday.


The research carried out at Stockholm University in cooperation with experts at Sweden's National Food Administration, a government food safety agency, showed that heating of carbohydrate-rich foods, such as potatoes, rice or cereals formed acrylamide, a much studied substance classified as a probable human carcinogen.

The research was deemed so important that the scientists decided on the unusual step of going public with their findings before the research had been officially published in an academic journal.

"I have been in this field for 30 years and I have never seen anything like this before," said Leif Busk, head of the food administration's research department.

Findings unveiled at a news conference called by the food administration showed that an ordinary bag of potato chips may contain up to 500 times more of the substance than the top level allowed in drinking water by the World Health Organization (news - web sites).

French fries sold at Swedish franchises of U.S. fast-food chains Burger King Corp and McDonald's contained about 100 times the one microgram per liter maximum permitted by the WHO for drinking water, the study showed.

One milligram, or 0.001 grams, contains 1,000 micrograms.

KNOWN HAZARD

The Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites) classifies acrylamide, a colorless, crystalline solid, as a medium hazard probable human carcinogen.

According to the International Agency for Research on Cancer, acrylamide induces gene mutations and has been found in animal tests to cause benign and malignant stomach tumors.

It is also known to cause damage to the central and peripheral nervous system.

"The discovery (news - web sites) that acrylamide is formed during the preparation of food, and at high levels, is new knowledge. It may now be possible to explain some of the cases of cancer caused by food," Busk said.

"Fried, oven-baked and deep-fried potato and cereal products may contain high levels of acrylamide," the administration said.

"Acrylamide is formed during the preparation of food and occurs in many foodstuffs...Many of the analyzed foodstuffs are consumed in large quantities, e.g. potato crisps, french fries, fried potatoes, biscuits and bread."

Among products analyzed in the study were potato chips made by Finnish company CHIPS ABP, whose shares fell 14.5 percent to six-month lows, as well as breakfast cereals made by U.S. Kellogg, Quaker Oats Co, part of PepsiCo Inc, and Swiss Nestle, and Old El Paso brand tortilla chips.

"For us, these are completely new findings which have never before been known to the world's foodstuffs industry," CHIPS ABP said in a statement to the Helsinki stock exchange.

Stefan Eriksson, marketing manager Burger King's subsidiary in Sweden, told Reuters by telephone: "We have received the information and we are evaluating what it will mean."

Spokesmen for the other companies mentioned in the research were not immediately available for comment.

NO PRODUCTS WITHDRAWN

Margareta Tornqvist, an associate professor at Stockholm University's department of environmental chemistry, said the consumption of a single potato crisp could take acrylamide intake up to the WHO maximum for drinking water.

Busk said, however, that the product analysis based on more than 100 random samples was not extensive enough for the administration to recommend the withdrawal of any products from supermarket shelves.

"Frying at high temperatures or for a long time should be avoided," Busk said, adding: "Our advice to eat less fat-rich products such as french fries and crisps, remains valid."

He said the findings applied worldwide, not only to Sweden, as the food raw materials used in the analyzes had showed no traces of acrylamide.

Swedish authorities had informed the European Commission (news - web sites) and EU member countries, Busk said.

"It is the first time we have come across such a result. We will evaluate this study and look at it but it is important to say that Sweden has not withdrawn any products from the market," said European Commission spokeswoman Beate Gminder.

"Therefore we'll have to see what the scientific evaluation by our side and by scientists in the member states will bring about," she said.

Liliane Abramsson-Zetterberg, a toxicologist at the Swedish food administration, said: "The cancer risk from acrylamide is much higher than (the levels) we accept for known carcinogens."

But smoking, which is known to cause cancer, remained a bigger risk, she said.
 
RE: Yikes!

Well, I'm going to try and make some money on it too by shorting McDonalds stock. I bet this is on the evening news tonight.
 
more info

I saw this at Fox News:


The Great Potato Chip Scare











Friday, April 26, 2002
By Steven Milloy



Swedish scientists reported this week that eating potato
chips may expose you to dangerously high amounts of the
supposedly cancer-causing substance acrylamide.

Not to worry, though. You'd choke on the chips before you croaked from the
chemical.

Stockholm University researchers claim to have shown that baking or frying
carbohydrate-rich foods, such as potatoes and cereals, formed acrylamide, a
substance classified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as a
"probable human carcinogen."

"I have been in this field for 30 years and I have never seen anything like this
before," said Leif Busk, head of research for Sweden's National Food
Administration. "The discovery ... is new knowledge. It may now be possible
to explain some of the cases of cancer caused by food ... Frying at high
temperatures or for a long time should be avoided," Busk added.

Should you chuck your chips and get a haz-mat team to decontaminate your
pantry? Should personal injury lawyers fire up the class action lawsuit
machine against potato chip makers for addicting us to an allegedly
cancer-causing product? ("Lays Potato Chips, betcha can't eat just one!")

Hardly.

First, there isn't even a study available for review. The dire news was rushed
to market via press conference. The researchers deemed their findings so
important that they couldn't wait to have them officially published in an
academic journal.

But science-by-press-conference is not part of the tried-and-true scientific
method and almost invariably indicates junk science.

What's the rush in making these claims anyway? Humans have only been
consuming baked and fried foods for thousands of years. If these foods were
killing us, we likely would have noticed by now.

Yes, the EPA classifies acrylamide as a probable human carcinogen. But
this is not based on any studies involving humans. The classification is
based only on laboratory animal experiments that are of questionable
relevance to humans.

Mice obviously aren't little people. Lab animals are bred to be prone to cancer
and are so cancer prone that they get cancer simply from overeating, which
they typically are allowed to do. Then, the lab animals are fed massive doses
of the tested substances.

Using such experiments to predict human cancer risk isn't science — it's
voodoo.

Putting aside that reality check, the claims don't pass the next one.

The researchers claim that a single potato chip may contain as much as
one-millionth of a gram (a microgram) of acrylamide.

Assuming for the sake of argument that the lab animal tests are relevant to
humans, the lowest dose in lab animals at which a slight increase in cancer
incidence was reported is 500 micrograms per kilogram of rodent
bodyweight per day, according to the EPA.

For the average 70 kilogram adult (about 154 lbs.), that would be an
equivalent dose of acrylamide of 35,000 micrograms. To get an equivalent
daily dose of acrylamide as the lab animals, someone of average
bodyweight would have to eat 35,000 potato chips (about 62.5 pounds) per
day for life.

No, I can't eat only one potato chip, but 35,000? Let's get real.

The idea that you can get cancer from acrylamide-laden potato chips is as
dopey as the 1989 scare concerning the agricultural chemical Alar, formerly
used on apples. Assuming the lab animal tests for Alar are relevant to
humans, one would have to consume about 19,000 quarts of apple juice per
day for life to get the same dose as the lab animals.

Moreover, as pointed out in the American Council on Science and Health's
annual Holiday Dinner Menu, many foods naturally contain multiple
supposed carcinogens, including coffee, tea, alcohol, lettuce, tomatoes,
cooked meats, apples, pears, grapes, and others.

Food scares based on substances that cause cancer in lab animals can be
very silly. If you want to play it safe and avoid substances in food that cause
cancer in lab animals, try not to eat or drink.

Steven Milloy is the publisher of JunkScience.com , an adjunct scholar at the
Cato Institute and the author of Junk Science Judo: Self-defense Against
Health Scares and Scams (Cato Institute, 2001).
 
RE: more info

[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON Apr-26-02 AT 12:38PM (Est)[/font][p]What would you expect from the Cato Institute?

They call everything junk science if it in any way interferes with our God given right to trash and pollute everything in sight, eat like pigs and exploit what we want, when we want.

Thanks, I'll take the research.

P.S. This commentary isn't directed to you. I expected to see this kind of crap. After all, the food conglomerates pay for advertising on Fox television.
 
RE: more info

What would you expect from the Cato Institute?

They call everything junk science if it in any way interferes with our God given right to trash and pollute everything in sight, eat like pigs and exploit what we want, when we want.

Thanks, I'll take the research.

P.S. This commentary isn't directed to you. I expected to see this kind of crap. After all, the food conglomerates pay for advertising on Fox television.
 

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