Carrageenan Safety, Side-Effects & How to Avoid It

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Carrageenan
Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Carrageenan Safety, Side-Effects & How to Avoid It

If you’ve ever purchased store-bought almond or coconut milk, you may have noticed an ingredient called Carrageenan on the carton. This hard-to-pronounce little food additive is the reason I make my own homemade almond milk and homemade coconut milk, but it seems that there is a lot of confusion when it comes to this little known ingredient.

What is Carrageenan?

According to the Google:

Carrageenans or carrageenins are a family of linear sulfated polysaccharides that are extracted from red edible seaweeds. They are widely used in the food industry, for their gelling, thickening, and stabilizing properties.

Edible seaweeds, like kelp and Nori, right?

The Problem with Carrageenan

Not so much…

It is important to note that Carrageenan is not digestible and has no nutritional value. It is often used because it thickens and emulsifies products and it is often found even in organic and “natural” products.

It may seem that a simple product derived from seaweed should be non-menacing, and I wish it were. This article explains some of the potential problems:

Although derived from a natural source, it appears to be particularly destructive to the digestive system, triggering an immune response similar to that your body has when invaded by pathogens like Salmonella. The result: “It predictably causes inflammation, which can lead to ulcerations and bleeding,” explains veteran researcher Joanne Tobacman, MD, associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Illinois School of Medicine at Chicago. She says the food ingredient irritates by activating an immune response that dials up inflammation. Her previous work showed a concerning connection between carrageenan and gastrointestinal cancer in lab animals, and she’s involved with ongoing research funded through the National Institutes of Health that is investigating carrageenan’s effect on ulcerative colitis and other diseases like diabetes.

The concern over food-grade carrageenan isn’t new. Beginning in the 1960s, researchers started linking the ingredient to gastrointestinal disease in lab animals, including ulcerative colitis, intestinal lesions, and colon cancer.

Joanne K. Tobacman, M.D., associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of Illinois College of Medicine is one of the leading researchers in the field of digestive health sheds some interesting light on the topic:

Dr. Tobacman said that her research has shown that exposure causes inflammation and that when we consume processed foods containing it, we ingest enough to cause inflammation in our bodies. She explained that all forms of carrageenan are capable of causing inflammation. This is bad news. We know that chronic inflammation is a root cause of many serious diseases including heart disease, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, and cancer.

Dr. Tobacman also told the board that in the past, drug investigators actually used carrageenan to cause inflammation in tissues in order to test the anti-inflammatory properties of new drugs. And she reported further that when laboratory mice are exposed to low concentrations of carrageenan for 18 days, they develop “profound” glucose intolerance and impaired insulin action, both of which can lead to diabetes.

To make things slightly more complicated, there are two forms: degraded and undegraded carrageenan. Technically, undegraded is approved for use in food, while degraded is not.

Degraded carrageenan is also called poligeenan. Chris Kresser looked more closely at the research, and found that many of the animal studies are done using poligeenan and not undegraded carrageenan, which further muddies the water.

Kresser makes this important distinction:

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. In other words, food-grade carrageenan has not been shown to cause cancer in animal models. That doesn’t necessarily mean it is is in the clear when it comes to cancer, but contrary to popular belief, it is not a known carcinogen.

When we separate the research on poligeenan and undegraded carrageenan, we find that it is still linked to increased intestinal permeability (leaky gut), intestinal irritation, and colon ulcers. Limited human studies showed an increase in inflammation and cell arrest.

Where is Carrageenan Found?

When you start reading labels, you’ll be amazed at the number of products that contain carrageenan! Most infant formulas do, as well as most store-bought milk alternatives. Many creams, creamers and dairy products also contain carrageenan.

I recommend checking out this shopping guide for avoiding foods with Carrageenan.

Our solution is to find carrageenan free store-bought products, or save money by making our own. If you’ve been consuming store bought almond or coconut milk that contains this additive, consider using these recipes and making your own:

Almond Milk Recipe
Coconut Milk Recipe

The Bottom Line

It may not be as bad as some sources portray, but there is evidence that it can be harmful, especially if consumed regularly.

Many people report reacting negatively with symptoms like digestive troubles, skin rashes, and other health problems.

The research is shaky on if it is a carcinogen or not, but I’m yet to see any research touting its health benefits. Our family avoids it for this reason, especially as it is just used for thickening products and does not serve a nutritional purpose.

Additional Reading

Have you ever consumed a food with carrageenan? Did I miss any foods that contain it? Leave a comment below with foods you’ve found that contain it and that we should watch out for…

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Scott Soerries, MD, Family Physician and Medical Director of SteadyMD. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor.

Carrageenan is an additive often found in almond and coconut milk. The research is not conclusive but shows some link to intestinal and digestive problems.

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

354 responses to “Carrageenan Safety, Side-Effects & How to Avoid It”

  1. JoAnn Deason Avatar
    JoAnn Deason

    Is carrageenan in toothpaste bad since you don’t swallow it? I just bought a tube of “natural” toothpaste for $8.00 yesterday at our local health food store and it has it in it! 🙁 I am so disappointed, I can’t really afford to waste it, don’t have the money to buy something else right now!

    1. Allyson Turner Avatar
      Allyson Turner

      RETURN IT!! and tell them why. Let them know that for the prices they charge and the reputation they assume that THEY should be playing detective, not us. We need to start some sort of consumer awareness coalition that sends out alerts to the masses (the health food shoppers at the very least) telling them what products to boycott and why. From there, hit a ‘send’ button that goes to the CEO of the corporation letting them know that their product is unacceptable and that it will be boycotted until an acceptable level of integrity is met…Something like that.

      1. Sian Avatar

        Technically carrageenan IS natural. It is sourced from edible seaweed, as the article states. I think there is some more information to be found on this subject. Seamoss contains large amounts of carrageenan and is found to have extensive benefits! Maybe there are different types, or manners of processing to take into account.

      2. Heather Anne Bueltemann Avatar
        Heather Anne Bueltemann

        I just saw a product claiming to be a healthy skin serum for out in the sun or indoor tanners! Healthy is really being redefined. It contained Grapefruit EO! Photo sensitivity in a sun product! I tried to leave a post and they blocked me!

  2. Sally Avatar

    Thanks for cluing me in about the hazards of carrageenan. I wondered what it was…but didn’t take time to look it up. Now I know! I pinned your recipes for homemade almond milk and coconut milk, since that what we consume most often. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.

  3. Deb Tejada Avatar
    Deb Tejada

    This is on Wikipedia here. It’s a short article but worth a read. You really have to be a chemist/biologist/detective to eat healthy these days. An excerpt:
    “Carrageenan has undergone many long-term dietary studies under defined regulatory conditions en route to its current global regulatory status. While some indicate that carrageenan safely passes through rat GI tracts without adverse effect when it is a dietary ingredient, other animal dietary studies have observed colitis-like disease and tumor promotion.”

  4. Winnie Avatar

    Dog food. Carrageenan can be found in many types of canned dog food.

    My 20 pound dog ate Wellness canned dog food for years and last year we had to finally remove a benign fatty tumor that had grown to two pounds! Vet said it was the biggest one for any size dog when compared to the weight that he’d ever seen in decades of his practice.

    1. Deneen Smith Avatar
      Deneen Smith

      Not just dog food but cat food as well including the grain free. The only grain free cat food without is Wellness Chicken and only the chicken. All their other flavors have carrageenan. Very frustrating. We need to let manufacturers we aren’t happy. Look for Guar Gum too. I don’t want either in my diet and I don’t want it in my pet’s diet.

      1. Karen Avatar

        I called Wellness and told spoke with the Customer Support rep, to tell them I was switching from Wellness Cat food to Weruva (carageenan free) because it made two of my cats could not keep it down. As soon as I switched brands, their stomach problems went away. I asked them if they were considering removing it and they said no, they had not had any other requests. Don’t know if that was true or they had to say that for legal reasons. Maybe if they hear it enough!

    2. Sharon Avatar

      It’s also in fresh pet rolled refrigerated dog food! I just bought 3 med size rolls. My dogs love it too! Gosh, guess when they are done with it I’ll just give them Honest Kitchen dehydrated turkey named Embark. . All good stuff in it. I drink lactaid and its in it too! Guess I’ll try milk again!

  5. Kristin Avatar
    Kristin

    Thanks Katie for such an informative article! I nursed my son until he was 13 months and then I started giving him coconut/almond milk twice a day for the next year (he just turned 2). I would like to continue to make sure he gets enough calcium/Vitamin D, and certainly do not want to continue to do it by means of these milks. Any suggestions? I have been giving him about 5oz of 100% orange juice with Vit D/Calcium. We have also been having 1 yogurt a day, and we eat a very balanced and whole foods diet. I am all for making my own milks, but they aren’t going to contain the benefits of the added Vitamin D and Calcium are they? Also, I have found generic almond milk at our local store, but it contains gellan gum, which I believe according to Chris is better than carageenan, but what are your thoughts on that? Thank you!

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      I have added calcium powder to homemade milks before but I prefer in the summer to let the kids get the Vitamin D from the sun and from cod liver oil and the calcium from meats with bones and sardines 🙂

      1. Kristin Avatar
        Kristin

        Great, thank you! We have been going outside for our D, but living up north, it will only last a little longer! 🙂

  6. Cassie Avatar
    Cassie

    Great info. I have been a clean eater for a couple of years now and have noticed huge differences in my well being. It is a shame that we have to be so careful, even with so called “health” foods. Knowledge is the key, and thanks for putting it together for us!

  7. Sierra Avatar
    Sierra

    I am gluten-free and I am realizing that carrageenan causes digestive problems as well. It is a major bummer cause it is virtually every brand of heavy cream 🙁 and most other dairy products.

  8. Tasha Avatar

    I have tried making almond milk about 3 times now and for some reason every time it has had a “skunky” flavour that has made it undrikable. I am so frustrated. I have soaked the nuts, I haven’t soaked them. I have used homemade vanilla in it and artificial. I don’t know what is going wrong. On the plus side, I my coconut milk turns out great. I just want a variety for my kids.

    Has anyone else ever had this problem?

    1. gail Avatar

      I don’t by almond milk anymore. I make it and have never had the problem you have. I buy organic almonds from our local coop, because almonds from the big-box stores do not taste as good. I put one (1) cup of almonds and three (3) cups of purified water in the Vita-mix blender and blend till it looks really smooth. Sometimes I will put a few dates in for a little sweetness. I, then, strain it in a nut bag. The milk is creamy and yummy. I put the pulp in a baggy and freeze it until I am ready to use it. It spoils rather quickly, so needs to be frozen if not used right away. So far the ways I have tried the pulp in hot oatmeal and pancakes. Yummy! Eventually I want to try it in soups, gravies, cornbread, cookies, etc. Hope this gives you some ideas. Definitely try fresh, good quality almonds and run your water through a water purifier. I use the Britra pitcher to filter my water, and it makes it tastes so much better. Our water also effects the way our food tastes.

      1. Nicole Avatar

        Have you tried using blanched almonds? Pour boiling water over raw almonds for 5 minutes then peel the skin off (it usually pops off, so easy to do). Could be the skin giving you the ‘skunky’ flavor.

  9. Jose Mari Cortes Avatar
    Jose Mari Cortes

    funny thing is, almost anything bought in a supermarket, organic or not, seems to contain something to preserve shelf life, or to extend it. why not shop in a wet market where all you have to compete with is time (how long has the stuff been collected from the source farm, fishery or processing plant…

  10. Gerri Slaughter Avatar
    Gerri Slaughter

    I wrote to JJ Virgin about carrageenan last year and she told me I was over reacting but So Delicious the brand of almond milk she uses was
    supposed to remove carrageenan from it’s ingredient list but I’ve checked recently and it’s still in there. The problem with the Whole Foods brand is it has some other ingredients that are questionable. If in doubt make your own. When I go to my local health food store they are always showing me grass fed items (ie ice cream) and it usually has carrageenan or guar gum. They act like I’m ridiculously picky.

    1. Carol Avatar

      I find the same indifference with almost all stores, organic or not: they seem to think like traditional marketers about certain ingredients that many have discovered are unhealthy and unsafe, and think that we’re being super picky and maybe even a bit insane.
      I’m so tired of being treated that way just because I CARE about what goes into my body and how it affects my health!
      I guess that educating them is the best answer, and directing them toward blogs like this is the only way that they will ever change. One person (employee) at a time. It has worked for me a few times when I have told them to do research on something, and later they will stop me and tell me they had no idea.

    2. Angie Speakman Avatar
      Angie Speakman

      Since April 2015, SD took out the carrageenan from the coffee creamers, Yeah!

  11. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    I have a severe allergy to carrageenan so I avoid it like the plague! It is also found in lunch meat and recently I found it in the store brand raw chicken breast! I read all labels just to be safe but the raw chicken stunned me. People really are unaware of what they are eating.

    1. Jane Peters Avatar
      Jane Peters

      Yeah it’s criminal. Our food is being made by sociopaths.

  12. Brandi Avatar
    Brandi

    What is another word for Carrageenan? I don’t see it in my coconut or almond milk ingredients
    Thanks

  13. Carol Avatar

    I have been reading about agar-agar, (I have recipes that call for it) which is also made from red seaweed. Is this the same as carageenan, or is there a difference?

    1. Toni Avatar

      Did you ever find an answer to this? I have the same question, and can’t seem to find the answer anywhere on the Internet.

  14. kelly Avatar

    My son and I definitely react strongly to it…we make our own almond milk. Since we don’t really eat processed foods, we don’t find it an issue to avood.

  15. Betty Avatar

    I was having a rectal discharge and some cramping and happened upon an article about Carrageenan. We were eating a dish of ice cream every night and checked the ingredient list. There is was listed. I stopped eating the ice cream and have not had any more trouble. I buy Daisy sour cream and at present Silk Almond milk. I do check all products for ingredients. I’m so glad to hear about this and thank you for bringing this info to many others. I may try to make my own almond milk.

  16. Shannon goodner Avatar
    Shannon goodner

    Almond Breeze Almond Milk also has it in it. I just checked… I use that all the time thinking it’s healthier. I have celiacs and my daughter has issues with her tummy also. This is horrible. Thank you for sharing as I’m just beginning to learn how to steer clear of dangerous foods.

  17. kelley linn Avatar
    kelley linn

    The processing of carrageenan releases free (mono) glutamates. There is a great talk on TedX called “Unblind My Mind” that describes how this happens and she provides a resource on her site to over 50 ingredients in our foods that are mono glutamates (read:MSG). Carrageenan is on that list.

    1. Amy Avatar

      Thank you for this information! I can’t believe I did not know this. I have a terrible reaction to MSG and I also get very sick if I eat ice cream with carrageenan in it. It makes sense now!

    2. Nnika Avatar

      THANK YOU for that link, Kelley. It is really astonishing and helpful in my healthy journey. I also want to say Thank You for taking the time to provide such useful information to the masses, Katie.

      Xox

    3. Sue Avatar

      Good book on Neurotoxins by Russell Blaylock includes a list of MSG clones, including carrageenan.. Google it- they are poisons to your brain hiding behind thirty different names…

  18. Sarah Avatar

    Thanks so much for this information, I will be checking my produce. And thank you for including the recipes – I have 3 coconuts and almonds so guess what I’ll be making 🙂

  19. Deb T Avatar

    Just one more example of problems with store-bought products, the need to read labels and question everything. Fresh is best and I try to make as much as I can myself, but it’s not always possible. Thanks for the heads up, I really appreciate people like Katie (and Chris Kresser, etc) that continue to learn and share the information gained.

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