Thanks for taking the time to go through and comment on those abstracts Ysabella!
I agree with you that the label regulations should be changed and that people should be able to know if additional glutamates were added to their foods.
I also agree with you that it can be risky to draw conclusions from abstracts rather than the entire article. Unfortunately it’s a matter of time and money. I don't have time to go to the library where I could access some of thoe articles for free and its not practical for me to subscribe to a lot of professional journals.
What I usually do is research the topic I'm interested in on the net, try to draw some conclusions, and then see if I can back it up with the abstracts on PubMed. But that can be risky, I agree.
So you, Casebro and the FDA may be right and perhaps MSG
in normal dosages does not directly cause obesity or even overeating in most people. (I think its fair to say that the science community agrees that it would in abnormal dosages.) As time permits I will try to see if I can find (again -- I think I had found some last summer) any double blinded studies on the negative effects of normal quantities of food additives with MSG or other forms of glutamate on people. Maybe I'll even go to the library if I find any promising abstracts.
However, in the meantime, I think it's worth remembering that food manufacturers are willing to take on the cost of adding food additives with glutamate in their products because they believe it will make their products more desirable to the public. If I already have an issue with food and like to eat too much, why do I need to buy food treated with something designed to make it even more appetizing to me?

I obviously don't need any help in that department.

YMMV.
Regardless, I would probably have a diet low in MSG additives anyway because I have more than one reason to do so. For years I have tried to have a low-sodium (or at least a lower sodium

) diet. If a diet is low in sodium, chances are that it will be low in MSG. IIRC, adding MSG additives to food also increases the sodium percentage in food (I don't know if that is true for all forms of glutamate and I'm in the middle of trying to find that out. If someone already happens to know -- pls post!).
My grandparents had high blood pressure and I decided to be proactive about this a long time ago and buy foods low in sodium. Did it work? It's hard to say. So far I do have normal blood pressure (thank goodness!) but my sibs have had high blood pressure for years now. Now do I have normal blood pressure because I started altering my diet in my late 20s* or because regardless of what I ate, I never would have gotten high blood pressure? There's no way for me to definitively answer that question.
Also in regard to your friend who believes that glutamate can cross the blood brain barrier -- I think that's dependent on how much sodium is in the blood at the same time. I just skimmed this very quickly, but I think that is the gist of this PubMed abstract:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10736373&dopt=
Anyway, if my interpretation is correct, this could be another reason why mono sodium glutamate is problematic.
As an aside, I think its great that your mom is a neurologist and you can bounce ideas off her.
* What I starting doing in my late 20s (I'm 48 now) is watching the sodium content of foods that I ate or drank on a regular basis. I would still buy some processed foods high in sodium that I only ate occasionally, reasoning that my daily sodium consumption was still low.
Starting last summer when I intentionally avoided foods with MSG, my sodium consumption went down even more. The main difference in my grocery list is I stopped buying canned chicken and meat soups. Its not a big deal, I have a very simple recipe for a meat soup, it literally cooks on its own and I just make a few big batches a few times a year.
FWIW, I've found that I'm satisfied with one bowl of my soup** and I never was satisfied with one bowl of the canned soups.
** After I substituted tumeric and other spices for the bouillion cubes (lots of MSG!).