Home » Food Toxins, Future of Food, Nutrition, Organic

Food Dyes Pose Rainbow of Risks

Submitted by Drew Kaplan on July 4, 2010 – 11:43 am7 Comments

Food dyes—used in everything from M&Ms to Manischewitz Matzo Balls to Kraft salad dressings—pose risks of cancer, hyperactivity in children, and allergies, and should be banned, according to a new report by the Center for Science in the Public Interest. A top government scientist agrees, and says that food dyes present unnecessary risks to the public. The three most widely used dyes, Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6, are contaminated with known carcinogens, says CSPI. Another dye, Red 3, has been acknowledged for years by the Food and Drug Administration to be a carcinogen, yet is still in the food supply.

Despite those concerns, each year manufacturers pour about 15 million pounds of eight synthetic dyes into our foods. Per capita consumption of dyes has increased five-fold since 1955, thanks in part to the proliferation of brightly colored breakfast cereals, fruit drinks, and candies pitched to children.

“These synthetic chemicals do absolutely nothing to improve the nutritional quality or safety of foods, but trigger behavior problems in children and, possibly, cancer in anybody,” said CSPI executive director Michael F. Jacobson, co-author of the 58-page report, “Food Dyes: A Rainbow of Risks.” “The Food and Drug Administration should ban dyes, which would force industry to color foods with real food ingredients, not toxic petrochemicals.”

Blue 1, Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6 have long been known to cause allergic reactions in some people. CSPI says that while those reactions are not common, they can be serious and provide reason enough to ban those dyes. Furthermore, numerous studies have demonstrated that dyes cause hyperactivity in children.

But the biggest concern is cancer. Back in 1985, the acting commissioner of the FDA said that Red 3, one of the lesser-used dyes, “has clearly been shown to induce cancer” and was “of greatest public health concern.” However, Secretary of Agriculture John R. Block pressed the Department of Health and Human Services not to ban the dye, and he apparently prevailed—notwithstanding the Delaney Amendment that forbids the use of in foods of cancer-causing color additives. Each year about 200,000 pounds of Red 3 are poured into such foods as Betty Crocker’s Fruit Roll-Ups and ConAgra’s Kid Cuisine frozen meals. Since 1985 more than five million pounds of the dye have been used.

Tests on lab animals of Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6 showed signs of causing cancer or suffered from serious flaws, said the consumer group. Yellow 5 also caused mutations, an indication of possible carcinogenicity, in six of 11 tests.

In addition, according to the report, FDA tests show that the three most-widely used dyes, Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6, are tainted with low levels of cancer-causing compounds, including benzidine and 4-aminobiphenyl in Yellow 5. However, the levels actually could be far higher, because in the 1990s the FDA and Health Canada found a hundred times as much benzidine in a bound form that is released in the colon, but not detected in the routine tests of purity conducted by the FDA.

“Dyes add no benefits whatsoever to foods, other than making them more ‘eye-catching’ to increase sales,” said James Huff, the associate director for chemical carcinogenesis at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences’ National Toxicology Program. “CSPI’s scientifically detailed report on possible health effects of food dyes raises many questions about their safety. Some dyes have caused cancers in animals, contain cancer-causing contaminants, or have been inadequately tested for cancer or other problems. Their continued use presents unnecessary risks to humans, especially young children. It’s disappointing that the FDA has not addressed the toxic threat posed by food dyes.”

CSPI’s report notes that FDA’s regulations mandate a stricter standard of safety for color additives than other food additives, saying that there must be “convincing evidence that establishes with reasonable certainty that no harm will result from the intended use of the color additive.” The standard of “convincing evidence” does not apply to preservatives, emulsifiers, and other additives.

CSPI charges that the FDA is not enforcing the law in several regards:

Red 3 and Citrus Red 2 should be banned under the Delaney amendment, because they caused cancer in rats (some uses were banned in 1990), as should Red 40, Yellow 5, and Yellow 6, which are tainted with cancer-causing contaminants.
Evidence suggests, though does not prove, that Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, Red 40, and Yellow 6 cause cancer in animals. There certainly is not “convincing evidence” of safety.
Dyed foods should be considered adulterated under the law, because the dyes make a food “appear better or of greater value than it is”—typically by masking the absence of fruit, vegetable, or other more costly ingredient.
In a letter sent today, CSPI urged the FDA to ban all dyes because the scientific studies do not provide convincing evidence of safety, but do provide significant evidence of harm.

A ninth dye, Orange B, is approved for coloring sausage casings, but in 1978 the FDA proposed banning it because it was found to be toxic to rats. The industry has not used Orange B in more than a decade. Also, the International Agency for Research on Cancer has labeled Citrus Red 2 a carcinogen, and the FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives said “this color should not be used as a food additive.” However, it poses little risk because it is approved only for coloring the skins of oranges.

Because of concerns about dyes’ impairment of children’s behavior, the British government asked companies to phase out most dyes by last December 31, and the European Union is requiring, beginning on July 20, a warning notice on most dyed foods. CSPI predicted that the label notice—“may have an adverse effect on activity and attention in children”—likely will be the death knell for dyes in all of Europe.

The greater government oversight and public concern across the Atlantic results in McDonald’s Strawberry Sundae in Britain being colored with strawberries, but in the United States with Red dye 40. Likewise, the British version of Fanta orange soda gets its bright color from pumpkin and carrot extract, but in the United States the color comes from Red 40 and Yellow 6. Starburst Chews and Skittles, both Mars products, contain synthetic dyes in the United States, but not in Britain.

Fortunately, says CSPI, many natural colorings are available to replace dyes. Beet juice, beta-carotene, blueberry juice concentrate, carrot juice, grape skin extract, paprika, purple sweet potato or corn, red cabbage, and turmeric are some of the substances that provide a vivid spectrum of colors. However, CSPI warns that “natural” does not always mean safe. Carmine and cochineal—colorings obtained from a bright red insect—can cause rare, but severe, anaphylactic reactions. Annatto, too, can cause allergic reactions.

“Food Dyes: Rainbow of Risks” was written by Sarah Kobylewski, a Ph.D. candidate in the Molecular Toxicology Program at the University of California, Los Angeles, and Michael F. Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest. Jacobson is author of Eater’s Digest: The Consumer’s Factbook of Food Additives (Doubleday, 1972).

http://www.cspinet.org/new/201006291.html




[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]

7 Comments »

  • Harish Dalal says:

    Instead of asking people not to consume harmful items, would it not be easier to stop the manufacture of these harmful products?
    I found it rather odd when, many years ago, Philip Morris had a TV advertisement requesting parents to go to their website to learn how to prevent children from smoking. I never got a response to my letter to the then CEO suggesting that the easier avenue would be for them not to manufacture the cigarettes.

    [Reply]

  • Annasmom says:

    My daughter is one of those who react poorly to dyes. She gets hyper and then enters a druglike trance when it is leaving her system. Children’s performances in school would improve tremendously if dyes were removed from foods! Imagine the possible increase in test scores!

    [Reply]

  • John Lugo Jr. says:

    It is good that the public is made aware of these dangers. Thank you. Now as far as preventing the abusive distribution of these harmful chemicals, we need not to use the tainted products and let everyone know that fact. If enough intelligent people respond accordingly, the manufacturers will change their harmful ingredient for beneficial additives.

    [Reply]

  • Ria Wilson says:

    When my now 20 yr old was diagnosed ADHD in 1995 I began my campaign to help him and keep him off drugs (2 days on Ritalin had him, thank-you God!, with a horrible tic). We went with the exclusion of almost all food additives. I say almost because back then organic was not as big and I did now know about the stuff that is put in meats and vegetables (hormones, pesticides, etc) nor did I know about cleaning materials, rugs, paints, etc. We also began intense supplementation. Our theory is that he did not have what it took to remove the toxins out of his system, so increasing his vitamin and mineral intake would help him better deal with the build up of toxins. We then took this to the rest of the family. It has worked well for us, but my heart breaks each time I see a child unable to deal with the emotions caused by the build up of these toxins. They are quick to anger because they do not know why they are so irritable. We wonder about the rising tide of violence… I wonder why there is no one else seems to realize that we would be a better, happier, more productive society if we would fix our fuel supply (food, air, water). It would be so win-win! But in the final analysis, I agree with John Lugo Jr. QUIT BUYING THE STUFF! We need to boycott as that is the only way that big business will not put this stuff in our foods. Doesn’t it irritate anyone else that they only do this in the US? Why does Europe get the better deal?
    Why do so many of us insist that it is OK to eat something that will kill us over time?

    [Reply]

  • maryetta says:

    Don’t expect the gov’t to look out for you or your children…especially where money comes into the picture. Step up to the plate( pun intended) read the labels and don’t buy products that have these dyes or any dyes in them. Take control and don’t just roll over and take whatever whatever is thrown at you by advertisers and the gov’t.

    [Reply]

  • Steve Rose says:

    My daughter is allergic to artificial dyes especially red, in food drink and medicine. Unfortunately it took episodes of extreme hyperactivity, vomiting, broken glasses, and a concussion before I was able to figure out what in food was cuasing these reactions.

    Even if you are NOT allergic to these dyes, and DO NOT eventually develop cancer as a result of ingestion, there are numerous school studies showing that student test scores go up and hyperactivity goes down after removing candy machines and stopping the serving of foods at lunch cafeterias with all dyes.

    Even if you don’t care about your IQ, consider this: All dyes do zero to add nutrition to any food, drink or medicine, and YOUR LIVER must work extra hard to remove these dyes from your system every time you ingest them!

    The FDA managment is immoral and corrupt beyond beleif to continue to ignore years of requests and petitions from CSPI and other groups and well as just ordinary citizens like me who have written letters requesting they use science results and ban all dyes completely.

    Hundreds of thousands of parents of allergic children would not have to read every single label of every product to avoid their children risking another hospitalization from dyes.

    And many millions more children would be more well-behaved and receptive to learning!

    We are all worth it.

    [Reply]

  • Corinne Z says:

    I am 50 yrs. old now ( can’t believe I admitted that, ha!) & discovered if I eat too much Italian ices (more than 2 cups at a time)which have alot of dye,I wake up in the middle of the night with the worse leg cramps from my foot all the way up to the top of my leg. It was very painful & scary. I quickly made the connection, as it happened the 3 times I ate alot of ices just before going to bed.My body is so in tune to artificial ingredients,pesticides,etc.. so I’ve kept away from them for years now. Now I know to keep away from Ital.ices.
    And YES, WE, the people need to boycott everything that is bad for our “good health”. When are the people going to get it…the government & “big corporations” will never do anything about it,they make big bucks from this stuff,bec. it’s cheap to produce. We also need to get rid of the lobbyists who are behind this garbage. The truth is our Congress & Senate is so corrupt,all they care about is who’s paying under the table.

    [Reply]

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.