| Literature DB >> 27189588 |
Yoko Obayashi1, Yoichi Nagamura2.
Abstract
Although monosodium glutamate (MSG) is classified as a causative substance of headache in the International Classification of Headache Disorders 3rd edition (ICHD-III beta), there is no literature in which causal relationship between MSG and headache was comprehensively reviewed. We performed systematic review of human studies which include the incidence of headache after an oral administration of MSG. An analysis was made by separating the human studies with MSG administration with or without food, because of the significant difference of kinetics of glutamate between those conditions (Am J Clin Nutr 37:194-200, 1983; J Nutr 130:1002S-1004S, 2000) and there are some papers which report the difference of the manifestation of symptoms after MSG ingestion with or without food (Food Chem Toxicol 31:1019-1035, 1993; J Nutr 125:2891S-2906S, 1995). Of five papers including six studies with food, none showed a significant difference in the incidence of headache except for the female group in one study. Of five papers including seven studies without food, four studies showed a significant difference. Many of the studies involved administration of MSG in solution at high concentrations (>2 %). Since the distinctive MSG is readily identified at such concentrations, these studies were thought not to be properly blinded. Because of the absence of proper blinding, and the inconsistency of the findings, we conclude that further studies are required to evaluate whether or not a causal relationship exists between MSG ingestion and headache.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese restaurant syndrome (CRS); Headache; Human study; International classification of headache disorders (ICHD); Monosodium glutamate (MSG); Systematic review
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27189588 PMCID: PMC4870486 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-016-0639-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Human studies of MSG with food
| First author | Vehicle for MSG administration | Protocol | Number of subjects | Incidence of headache | Statistical difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prawirohardjono W (2000) [ | Opaque capsule | (1)In the morning, after fasting for 10 h, subjects ingested three capsules containing MSG(0.5 g MSG & 0.5 g lactose or 1.0 g MSG) or placebo(1.0 g lactose). (2)A standardized breakfast was provided and consumed immediately after capsule ingestion. | 52 healthy volunteers (Indonesians) (Mean age 29.6 ± 6.5y, mean mass 53.4 ± 7.4 kg, mean height 159.9 ± 7.7 cm) *No indication about gender. | Placebo : 3 1.5 g MSG : 4 3.0 g MSG : 2 | No difference |
| Tarasoff L (1993) [ | Capsule | Fasting condition On first 3 days, 6 capsules immediately followed by breakfast. | 71 healthy volunteers (female:41, mean age:30.7) *Mainly Caucasians | Placebo (gelatin powder): 1 1.5 g MSG: 0 3.0 g MSG: 0 | No difference |
| Specially formulated drinks | On remaining 2 days, 300 ml soft drink immediately followed by breakfast. | Placebo (drink): 0 3.15 g MSG (drink): 0 | No difference | ||
| Tanphaichitr V (1983) [ | Boiled rice with pork | Menu A-D(w/o MSG), E(added 3 g MSG) were serve as breakfast on Day 1–5 by this order. | 50 adults (male:25, female:25) | Menu A(w/o MSG):4 Menu B(w/o MSG):0 Menu C(w/o MSG):2 Menu D(w/o MSG):2 Menu E(3 g MSG):0 | No difference |
| Zanda G (1973) [ | Beef bouillon | 3 g MSG(placebo: no MSG, no substitute) in 150 ml beef bouillon followed by other dishes. [First session] Some subjects at random received MSG. [Second session(2 days later)] Opposite to the first session | 73 healthy volunteers (male:38, female:35, mean age:25, 17–76y) | Control(male):1 Control(female):1 3 g MSG (male):1 3 g MSG (female):6* ( | Only MSG-treated women had a significantly higher incidence of headache than control. |
| Blood pressure and pulse rate were also recorded. | |||||
| Morselli PL (1970) [ | Beef broth | 3 g MSG in 150 ml beef broth followed by other dishes(meat, vegetables, fruit). [First session] MSG:8 sub., control:16 sub. [Second session(2 days later)] Opposite to the first session | 24 healthy volunteers (male:17, female:7) | Control: 1 3 g MSG: 2 | No difference |
*; Statistically significant difference was found between placebo and MSG group (P < 0.05)
Human studies of MSG without food
| Researcher | Vehicle for MSG administration | Protocol | Number of subjects | Incidence of headache | Statistical difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geha RS (2000) [ | 200 ml of citrus-flavored beverage | [Protocol A] 5 g MSG and placebo (0 g MSG) on separate day (day 1 & 2) | 130 self-reported MSG-reactive volunteers (female:84, male:46) | [Frequency] Placebo: 0.28 5 g MSG: 0.54 ( | Significant difference |
| Yang WH (1997) [ | 200 ml of a strongly citrus-tasting beverage sweetened by sucrose. | (1) 5 g MSG or placebo(0 g MSG) (empty stomach) | 61 subjects self-identified MSG-sensitive people (male:15, white:59, black:1, oriental:1) | Placebo: 24 5 g MSG: 23 | No difference |
| (2) placebo(0 g MSG, no substitute), 1.25, 2.5, 5 g MSG in random sequence. | 36 subjects Subjects who responded to either of MSG or placebo in study(1) (not both or not neither). No indication about gender. | Placebo: 9 1.25 g MSG: 11 2.5 g MSG:16( | 1.25 g: no difference 2.5, 5 g:significant difference | ||
| Shimada A (2013) [ | 400 ml Sugar-free lemon soda | MSG (150 mg/kg = 9 g/60 kg) for 5 consecutive days (in the week) and NaCl (24 mg/kg) in the other week in randomized sequence. | 14 healthy adults (female:9, male:5) | Placebo: 2 150 mg/kg MSG(=9 g/60 kg): 8* (P = 0.041) | Significant difference |
| Baad-Hansen L (2010) [ | 400 ml Sugar-free soda | NaCl (24 mg/kg), MSG (75 or 150 mg/kg =6 or 9 g/60 kg) in random sequence. | 14 healthy men | Placebo: 0 75 mg/kg MSG(=4.5 g/60 kg): 27* (P = 0.045, vs placebo and 150 mg/kg MSG) 150 mg/kg MSG (=9 g/60 kg): 7 | 75 mg/kg: significant difference 150 mg/kg: no difference |
| Rosenblum I (1971) [ | 100 ml tap water or chicken stock | 15 h after the last meal. (Group I–IV)5 g MSG in tap water(49 subjects) or chicken stock(49 sub.). (Group V)1.7 g NaCl in chicken stock(24 sub.) (Group VI) chicken stock(25 sub.). | 99 male volunteers, 21–59 years old. | [Frequency] Placebo(Group V, VI):8 % 5 g MSG(Group I–IV):17 % | No difference |
| 100 ml chicken stock | (Group VII) 8 g(6 sub.) MSG in chicken stock, 2.8 g NaCl in chicken stock(5 sub.). (Group VIII) 12 g MSG in chicken stock(5 sub.), 4.2 g NaCl in chicken stock (5 sub). | 11 people Chosen from the original 99 subjects, based on the results of the test above. One-half reported multiple complaints on the questionnaire while the other reported no complaints. | Placebo(NaCl2.8 g):2 8 g MSG(VII):3 Placebo(NaCl4.2 g):0 12 g MSG(VIII):2 | No difference |
*; Statistically significant difference was found between placebo and MSG group (P < 0.05)
**; Statistically significant difference was found between placebo and MSG group (P < 0.01)
Human studies of MSG which were referenced by ICHD-III beta
| First author | study type | Number of subjects | MSG administration | with (w) or without(w/o) food | Statistical analysis in the paper | statistical difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tarasoff L (1993) [ | human study | 71 | capsule | w | performed | No difference |
| 3.15 g MSG/300 ml soft drink | w | performed | No difference | |||
| Yang WH (1997) [ | human study | 61(self-identified MSG sensitive) | 5 g MSG/200 ml strongly citrus-tasting beverage | w/o | performed | No difference |
| 36(self-identified MSG sensitive) | 1.25–5 g MSG/200 ml strongly citrus-tasting beverage | w/o | performed | 2.5, 5 g: Significant difference | ||
| Gore M (1980) [ | human study | 55 | 1.5–6 g MSG/150 ml tap water | w/o | not performed | No difference (Fisher test) |
| Kenny RA (1972) [ | human study | 77 | 5 g MSG/150 ml tomato juice | w/o | not performed | No difference (Fisher test) |
| 22 | 1–5 g MSG/ 150 ml tomato juice or water | w/o | not performed | cannot analyze | ||
| Merrit JE (1990) [ | in vitro |
Human studies of MSG which were referenced by ICHD-III beta but were not complied with the criteria for the systematic review
| First author | Vehicle for MSG administration | Protocol | Number of subjects | Incidence of headache | Statistical difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gore M (1980) [ | 150 ml cold tap water | After an overnight fast, subjects ingested, on different days, 1.5, 3, 6 g MSG and three paired placebo materials, the order of each pair being randomized. (There was no indication about the content "three paired placebo materials") | 30 men, 25 women | [Total number of positive responses by 3 doses] MSG: 8 episodes (7 subjects), Placebo: 2 episodes (2 subjects) | No difference (Fisher test) Statistical analysis in each symptom was not performed in the paper. |
| Kenny RA (1972) [ | 150 ml tomato juice | (Phase 1) 2 h after breakfast, 5 g MSG on1 day and 0.8 g NaCl on the other 2 days. Breakfast type: (1)no breakfast (2)liquids (milk, coffee, juice) or instant breakfast (3)largely of carbohydrate(cereal, toast, etc.) (4)containing protein (eggs, ham, etc.) | (Phase 1) 77 subjects | [Number of positive responses] MSG : 4, Placebo : 2 | No difference (Fisher test) Statistical analysis was not performed in the paper. |
| 150 ml tomato juice (J) or water (W) | (Phase 2) JP1 : 0.8 g NaCl, WP: 0.7 g NaCl, WM5 : 5 g MSG + 0.2 g NaCl, JM1 : 1 g MSG, JM2 : 2 g MSG, JM3 : 3 g MSG, JM4 : 4 g MSG, JP2 : 0.8 g NaCl | (Phase 2) 22 out of 25 subjects, who reacted only to MSG on phase 1 study | [Number of positive responses / subjects] JM1 : 1 /15, JM2 : 2/13, JM3 : 4/13, JM4 : 5/14, WM5 : 8/17 | Since the incidence of placebo group (JP1, WP, JP2) is not shown, statistical analysis cannot be done. |