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Harmful or Harmless: Carrageenan

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carrageenan, carrageenan side effects

Carrageenan, a heavily discussed additive in the world of alternative health, is an indigestible polysaccharide that is extracted from red algae, and is most commonly used in food as a thickener or stabilizer. Carrageenan-containing seaweeds have been used for centuries in food preparations for their gelling properties, but the refined, isolated carrageenan found in modern processed foods has raised concerns in the health-conscious online community. (1)

Carrageenan is especially common in non-dairy milks such as almond milk and coconut milk, which means that some people who transition to a Paleo diet might actually be increasing their exposure if they use these products. I discussed carrageenan on a recent podcast, but today I want to give you a more detailed summary of the evidence.

Hold the almond milk… is carrageenan affecting your health?

There are a few distinct types of carrageenan that differ in their chemical properties, but the most important distinction is between degraded carrageenan and undegraded carrageenan. From a chemical standpoint, the difference between these two types is in their molecular weight. From a practical standpoint, undegraded carrageenan is approved for use in food products, while degraded carrageenan is not. (2) Although both substances are often referred to as ‘carrageenan,’ they have very different chemical properties and should really be treated as separate compounds. Degraded carrageenan is also called ‘poligeenan,’ which is how I will refer to it in the rest of this article to avoid any confusion.

Animal Studies

Most of the carrageenan hysteria stems from animal studies that implicate carrageenan in the formation of ulcerations and cancerous lesions in the colon. A thorough review of the approximately 45 available animal studies on carrageenan was published in 2001, and at first glance, these studies seem alarming. However, it turns out that the majority of these animal experiments used poligeenan instead of carrageenan, and as I mentioned before, these are two separate compounds with different effects. Poligeenan is significantly more detrimental to the health of lab animals than carrageenan, so the lack of a clear designation between them has given carrageenan a worse reputation than it deserves.

One important difference is that while poligeenan can cause cancer on its own when given in high enough concentrations, undegraded carrageenan has only ever been shown to accelerate cancer formation when administered with a known carcinogen. (3) In other words, food-grade carrageenan has not been shown to cause cancer in animal models. That doesn’t necessarily mean carrageenan is in the clear when it comes to cancer, but contrary to popular belief, it is not a known carcinogen.

Additionally, poligeenan produces more severe ulceration and inflammation than carrageenan, and at lower concentrations. As an example, a study on rhesus monkeys using poligeenan at 0.5-2% resulted in diarrhea, hemorrhage, and ulcerations, while carrageenan at 1-3% resulted in no colonic changes. (4) (For reference, the concentration of carrageenan in processed food is usually between 0.01% and 1%.) (5)

However, carrageenan has produced intestinal damage in some animal studies. Observed effects in rats include epithelial cell loss, increased intestinal permeability, and diarrhea. (6) In guinea pigs, carrageenan at a 5% concentration in the diet caused ulcers in the colon, although a similar concentration in the diets of rats and hamsters resulted in no difference from controls. (7) In pigs, concentrations of carrageenan between .05 and .5% administered for 83 days resulted in abnormalities in the intestinal lining, but no ulcerations or tumors. (8) Still, a more recent rat study found no ulcerations or lesions in the colon after 90 days of carrageenan administration. (9) These studies suggest that the effects of carrageenan are highly species-dependent, which makes it more difficult to extrapolate these results to humans.

There are a few other important considerations when determining how applicable these results are to humans. Many of these experiments administered the carrageenan through the animals’ drinking water as opposed to their food, which tends to increase the severity of the resulting symptoms. Because carrageenan interacts with protein molecules, consuming it as part of a solid food is much less harmful than consuming it in water. Also, although many of the concentrations administered are comparable to concentrations found in processed foods, many experiments were conducted at concentrations much higher than humans would ever encounter on a normal diet. Remember, these studies are looking at carrageenan as a percentage of the entire diet, not just less than 1% of a small portion of the total diet, as is the case when using milk replacement products.

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Human Studies

Experimental evidence on the effects of carrageenan in humans is extremely limited, for obvious ethical reasons. However, a few in vitro experiments have been conducted on isolated human intestinal cells.

One study found that in intestinal epithelial tissue, carrageenan exposure increased the expression of two pro-inflammatory transcription factors. (10) This reaction appears to be protective of the intestinal tight junctions, because suppression of either of the inflammatory factors resulted in increased permeability of the isolated epithelial tissue. Unfortunately, it’s unclear whether they used food-grade carrageenan rather than poligeenan in this experiment.

Two similar studies that did use food-grade carrageenan also found that isolated intestinal epithelial tissue responded to carrageenan by up regulating inflammation. (11, 12) Another study on human intestinal epithelium found that undegraded carrageenan reduced the activity of many sulfatase enzymes, with potential negative ramifications for the function and vitality of the cell. (13)

Finally, another study found that exposing human intestinal epithelial cells to undegraded carrageenan in concentrations lower than what would be found in a typical diet caused increased cell death, reduced cell proliferation, and cell cycle arrest. (14)

These studies provide some support for the generalization of the animal studies to humans, implicating carrageenan in the potential for intestinal inflammation. However, it’s important to remember that not only were these studies in vitro (aka not in the human body), they also didn’t administer the carrageenan with any food, so the effects observed may differ significantly from what actually occurs when humans ingest carrageenan in a real-world setting.

Exposure to Poligeenan

Because poligeenan can be produced from carrageenan, many researchers and laypeople have expressed concern that we might be exposed to poligeenan through contamination of the food supply. However, the most recent sources indicate that the poligeenan contamination level of food-grade carrageenan is less than 5%. (15)

Another encouraging data point in this situation is that while carrageenan is an extremely effective thickener and emulsifier at concentrations as low as .01%, poligeenan has no functional effect in food even at concentrations up to 10%. (16) Specific chemical processing is necessary for carrageenan to be degraded to poligeenan, and because poligeenan is of no use in the food industry, it seems unlikely that poligeenan would show up in appreciable quantities in processed foods.

Another concern is whether small percentages of ingested carrageenan are degraded to poligeenan in the digestive tract after consumption, either because of the acidic environment or because of intestinal bacteria. Some experimental evidence indicates that as much as 10-20% of carrageenan could be degraded to poligeenan during digestion, while other researchers (not surprisingly funded by the carrageenan industry) assert that carrageenan is stable throughout digestion. (17, 18) Regardless, the significant differences between poligeenan and carrageenan as evidenced by the reactions of lab animals make it pretty clear that even if some degradation does take place, carrageenan still doesn’t have the potential for harm that poligeenan does.

Conclusion

As with magnesium stearate and soy lecithin, carrageenan has been frequently portrayed as significantly more harmful than is supported by available evidence. Contrary to popular belief, it’s not a known carcinogen, and although some studies implicate carrageenan in ulceration and inflammation, some show no adverse effects.

However, I do still think caution is warranted. If I had to rank additives, I’d say carrageenan is a bit more concerning than the other two additives we’ve discussed so far because of its association with gut issues. Remember, in cases involving modern ingredients, the burden of proof should be on manufacturers to prove that they’re safe, rather than on consumers to prove that they’re harmful. Because the evidence isn’t conclusive either way, I recommend avoiding carrageenan, especially if you have a history of digestive problems.

Personally, I adhere to the “precautionary principle” for anything I eat; in other words, in the absence of proven safety, I choose to avoid foods that have questionable adverse effects. Carrageenan fits this description, as there’s still some doubt about its safety and no evidence has convinced me that there isn’t a potential for harm if consumed regularly.

Occasional exposure is likely nothing to worry about, but for most people reading this, avoiding carrageenan is probably as simple as making your own nut milk or coconut milk, so I would encourage you to give that a shot. Also, if you follow the links to those two posts, some commenters have shared brands of almond and coconut milk that don’t contain carrageenan (although watch out for other additives that may be present).

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427 Comments

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  1. Thanks for the great post and the opportunity to comment. The American palate has been trained to accept solidified and thickened food over many decades and reject those with a thin and watery. Gelatin and carrageenan became the main food additives to satisfy this desired textured product. Carageenan passes for a vegetarian product while gelatin does not. Rebellion against food additives such as thickeners will result in the need to change our food preferences. I am sure most of us will adjust and be better off with more pure and genuine foods. Icecream made with high quality heavy cream tastes so much better than additive thickened milk.

  2. UPDATE: I’ve had no issues since eliminating all carrageenan from my diet. I would urge anyone with similar problems to write or call their regional FDA contact. Mine told me that “one report probably won’t make a difference,” so let’s make our voices heard…

    • My intestinal problems also disappeared when I stopped consuming carrageenan, but I didn’t know that was the reason at the time! I had been eating four different foods (some daily, some weekly) that contained carrageenan. I was having major intestinal pain, bloating, diarrhea/constipation. I ended up getting two colonoscopies, and two CT scans, had a cancer scare…when it was all over, and I got back to “normal”, my intestinal problems did not return, and I had no idea why! About two months later, I got an email newsletter from Cornucopia.org about carrageenan, and I read up. I noticed that all the symptoms listed were the symptoms I had had. I went to their list of organic foods with carrageenan, and low and behold!!! There were about four foods there that I had been eating regularly while I was sick! And, this is the major point: these foods were no longer a part of my diet, for various circumstantial reasons, and my intestinal problems were gone! I couldn’t believe it. Could this have been the problem all along? My only residual problems at this point was after eating out at restaurants. I finally stopped eating anything with cream or anything that potentially or likely had carrageenan when at restaurants. My lingering problems disappeared.
      You can’t even chalk my experience up to placebo effect, because I only discovered the carrageenan issues AFTER the changes in my diet solved my problems!

  3. I don’t care how much the animals are getting, all it takes is the amount in ONE ice cream sandwich too send me to bed with painful stomach cramps. If it can do that, it can’t be too good. I am sensitive to it now, but wasn’t always. I drank Silk vanilla soy milk for 2 years before it started bothering me and I figured out what it was. If I’d known then what I know now I’d have never started drinking it. Avoid it!

    • Thanks, Laurie. Apparently I don’r have the same reaction as you, but it sounds like scary stuff. I’m going to have to figure out something else lactose free that gives me the nutrition Ensure gives me without the carrageenan. It’s a real problem for me as so much of what I eat isn’t absorbed and just goes into my ileostomy bag.

  4. Does anyone have any idea as to how much carrageenan is given to the animals when they are doing the testing. I have read about products that were deemed dangerous and later found out the animals tested were actually given the equivalent of more than a swimming pool of product. Since I have ulcerative colitus, am now living with the dreaded “bag” and drinking at least one Ensure a day, I am, of course, very concerned…don’t want to lose any more body parts.

  5. Wow, what a great article. I write about similar issues on my blog and know it takes a lot of time and research to lay out the facts as you have. I just noticed this ingredient in my almond milk, since I recently switched brands. Happy to be connected and look forward to more of your writing!

  6. Making Almond milk is SO easy.

    1,)Purchase Raw Organic Spanish Almonds (these have not been pasturized)

    2.)Soak 2 cups of almonds in good quality water for 6-8 hrs making sure you have them covered with a good amount of water. (I put mine in a wide mouth mason jar and cover them with what looks like an extra cup of water)

    3.)Put them in a strainer and rinse well.

    4.) Put your strained rinsed almond in the blender with 2 quarts of good quality water and blend until the almonds are broken pretty fine. (at this point the liquid is white and your blender quiets a bit. Aprox. 1-2 min.)

    5.) Pour into a nut milk bag or cheese cloth over a bowl or large jar.

    6.) Let the liquid run through and then squeeze the rest of the liquid out of the pulp.

    That’s it!! You have delicious organic homemade almond milk! Now you can dehydrate your almond pulp for recipes using almond flour or you can eat the pulp with the milk and add other nuts and dried fruit for a cereal. Mmmm!

  7. I have read that seaweed birds nest also known as Eucheuma Cottonii is farmed for it production of carrageenan . However this seaweed is sold as a health food claiming its richness in plant based collagen. Does anyone know whether consuming the unprocessed seaweed itself has any of the potentials and side effects of carrageenan or poligeenan? Thanks

  8. I was wondering if anyone has tried adding arrowroot flour or tapioca flour to homemade almond or coconut milk in order to thicken it up a bit? If so, does the milk stay mixed or does it separate quickly?

    • Dina, I hadn’t tried that but I tried a recipe once that called for canned coconut milk + egg yolk as a thickener. Can add a pinch of salt, some sweetener too if desired. The guar gum in the Native Forest brand I used made it thicken more and more each day (too much) and between that and wanting to avoid guar gum, I never made it again. Possibly a quick variation on this could be made using Rice Dream and coconut oil, for instance, in place of coconut milk.

  9. I love chocolate milk, but had to stop drinking it when they added carrageenan and I started getting sick from it. Recently when at the store I started reading the labels of everything in the dairy department. I finally found Silk dark chocolate almond milk, the only chocolate thing I could find (other than the completely artificial Yoohoo chocolate drink) without carrageenan in it. It tastes ok, I can drink it as a substitute for chocolate milk, but it’s not as good. On the plus side, it also doesn’t contain corn syrup, but has real cane sugar in it.

  10. Thank you for writing this article. I started looking into this ingredient because a more natural deodorant I was looking at contained carrageenan. While it’s being applied to skin, its absorption is likely less than when it’s ingested, though obviously it could be absorbed through the skin (I don’t know its properties well enough to say it is or it isn’t). I was hoping you might be able to elaborate on its use in body products. I am inclined to think that this is much less concerning that using deodorants with Aluminum in them, but I’m having difficulty finding information on it being used in this fashion from a reliable source. Skin Deep does list it middle of the road, but also seems to indicate inconclusive evidence. I wonder if that rating is merely based on its effects when used in food and also whether it’s the same formulation as the one that’s used in food (meaning, I read that there’s a degraded and I believe an undegraded form that have different weights and I wonder which form they use in body products). Thanks in advance!

    • totally off the carrageenan topic, – if you want a good natural deodorant, you cant beat crystal. google crystal deodorant. lasts a lifetime, literally.

      • Right on target, Carole! In the whole world there’s nothing that compares to Crystal Body Deodorant Stick (www.thecrystal.com). Nothing. : D

  11. Excellent article! I’m currently in limbo on this. I use the free half/half at starbucks (I pay enough for the java!), but now considering bringing my own. I recenty saw them refilling the half/half and got a couple of pics, sure enough–carrageenan. Thanks for the info. Dan

  12. ok…it’s not a nut milk, but Whole Foods has a brand called Rice Dream that does not contain any carrageenan. Tastes good and is an alternative to nut milks if you cannot make them yourself.

  13. Califia is not organic and their ingredient list is misleading since they do use additives as mentioned below. I want truly pure, so make own, fast and easy, in a Vitamix and milk bag using organic raw almonds and purified water 1:3. Good for 3 days, but so delish it’s long gone before then! Make as rich or lean as desired and customize your flavorings, if any. For soy milk, we blind-taste-tested 6 organic unsweetened brands and all felt Silk Organic was superior, had the least additives and no carrageenan.

  14. Some people, like myself, are sensitive to carageenan in foods. I can no longer drink soy milk or chocolate milk that contains it, as when I do I get severe stomach cramps. But trying to avoid it is becoming impossible! It’s in nearly every brand of ice cream, yogurt, soy milk, and anything that isn’t just plain milk. I am getting very limited in what I can consume dairy-wise these days. Can’t we get the industry to start using something else to thicken these products that doesn’t make people sick?

    • I just make my own, of pretty much everything. If you have a vitamix, freeze some coconut or almond milk in ice cube trays then throw some in the blender with some liquid milk, sweetener, and flavoring. Instant non-dairy ice cream. Or, throw a bunch of frozen fruit in with some non-dairy milk and possibly some sweetener and you have fruit ice cream. I buy Whole Foods 365 almond milk and Silk unsweetened. Neither has added sugar (my daughter is allergic) or carageenan.

    • This has been most interesting to read all the threads.

      Why are you trying so hard to eat dairy of Any kind. Read ‘The China Study’, the largest human study ever done to see what all animal products do to raising the cancer rates. Esp.Dairy!
      Cut out dairy. It’s very simple.

      We are being poisoned by the Food Industry for the sake of profit. A sick population Can not think nor defend itself. Your children are being born sick due to the toxic environment of mom’s womb. And while breast milk contains years of mom’s accumulated toxins, there is Nothing else better. Human babies drink human milk, period.

      Soy…….cut out soy everything. No milk, nuts, thickeners, etc.
      If you eat whole foods, (Not the store), plant based whole foods…life gets real simple.

      Everyone needs B-12 today. Including meat eaters. CAll Eco-Wellness.net for prices on Pure Encapsulations B-12 5000 liquid. Best price I’ve found. Too low to publish.

      Grow Your own sprouts. Put a fan blowing on them to eliminate any webbing, eat All the life force you’ll ever need. It’s a lie you get needed calcium from dairy. More from veggies in a form your body recognizes.

      Quit trying to short cut your health with processed, packaged foods. THINK. You are an energetic body. You need Life-force to live. You are eating dead animals, dead plants/grains, never-alive chemicals looking for Life Force. It isn’t going to happen.

      Make time to Live. Slow down. Feed your family like pre1950’s. It’s inconvenient, expensive, takes time and REALLY, REALLY good for you.

      Get pots and grow your lettuces. Easy and fun. Teach your children too.

      No more whining. It is time for a new day. We all bought the lie. We are paying for it. Our little ones are Really paying for it.

      Success will be ours IF we are willing to make changes. Cut out coffee (it is a drug) =-no need for cream.
      Freeze bananas/peaches/fresh fruits and run through an Omega/Champion, etc….amazing ‘ice cream’ with no crap.

      Make a smoothie in the morning.

      Eat fruit for snacks.

      Get a dehydrator (Harvest Essentials.com) and Really Open Up Your World.

      Enjoy your life.

      • Debbi M,

        Very cool! Let’s keep life simple to have perfect health. JJ Virgin (http://jjvirgin.com/) is right on target; if we eliminate these seven food groups we’ll lose pounds, up our energy, get lots of great sex, and live longer: soy, peanuts, sugar (except in organic fruits), corn, eggs, dairy (including dairy from animals other than cows), and gluten (everything having wheat, barley, and rye).

        We should strive to buy USDA Certified Organic, non-GMO, and Fair Trade Certified products as much as possible.

        Too pricey? Better to pay the grocer now than to pay the doctor later. : )

  15. It’s hard to wrap my head around when i always thought algae and seaweed are or were so good for you?

    • Seaweed and algae are good for you. The theory is that it’s the isolated form of carrageenan that can cause problems in some people. Separating the compound from the natural food source can make it harder to assimilate by the body since the other ingredients that occur naturally are no longer present.

  16. According to study posted by the Cornucopia Institute, degraded carrageenan, poligeenan, has been found to contaminate food grade carrageenan in 12 different food samples.

    “Researchers concerned with the effects of carrageenan in the diet have also used undegraded, food-grade carrageenan to investigate potentially harmful effects. When the carrageenan manufacturers’ trade group tested 12 samples of food-grade carrageenan, it found every sample was considered contaminated with degraded carrageenan (classified as a “possible human carcinogen”) by at least one of the testing laboratories.” http://www.cornucopia.org/2014/01/carrageenan-natural/

    So seeing carrageenan on the label is no guarantee that it is the safe food grade form. We need stricter standards that verify labeling claims.

  17. i have recently did away with Diet Rock Stars and Diet Mt Dew. i would make a almond ice coffee mixed in a protein shake. now i found out the almond milk is bad. what is another alternative? i leave for work at 2am and dont have the time for a long process

  18. There have been more studies that show degradation does indeed happen in the GI tract. I know for sure that my body degrades carrageenan to poligeenan during digestion. I react to it as if it’s a carcinogen. It’s found in deli meat, toothpaste, and even fresh chicken! I have trouble finding a dairy-, nut-, and soy-free milk alternative that doesn’t have carrageenan. I myself drink Silk Almond Milk, but my sons can’t have tree nuts.

    • In Canada, Montreal-Quebec, you can find “Natur-a brandFortified Soy Beverage”. They recently excluded the algae extract. I use the “Unsweeted”, as it is Xanthan gum free as well.
      search Natur-a
      you’re welcome!