
Are Carboxymethylcellulose, Polysorbate 80, and Other Emulsifiers Safe?Β
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Emulsifiers are the most widely used food additives. What are they doing to our gut microbiome?
When grocery shopping these days, unless youβre sticking to the produce aisle, βit is nearly impossible to avoid processed foods, particularly in the consumption of a typical Western diet,β which is characterized by insufficient plant foods, too much meat, dairy, and eggs, and a lot of processed junk, βalong with increased exposure to additives due to their use in processed foods.β
The artificial sweetener sucralose, for example, which is sold as Splenda, βirrefutably disrupts the gut microbiome at doses relevant to human useβ and βinduces glucose intolerance.β In other words, it can make our blood sugars worse instead of better. Itβs relatively easy to avoid artificial sweeteners, but βit may be much more difο¬cult to avoid ingestion of emulsiο¬ersβ¦because they are commonly added to a wide variety of foods within the modern Western diet.β In fact, βemulsifiers are the most widely used additives,β and βmost processed foods contain one or more emulsifiers that allow such foods to maintain desired textures and avoid separation into distinct parts (e.g, oil and water layers).β We now consume emulsifiers by the megaton every year, thanks to a multibillion-dollar industry, as you can see below and at 1:03 in my video Are Emulsifiers Like Carboxymethylcellulose and Polysorbate 80 Safe?.
Emulsifiers are commonly found in fatty dressings, breads and other baked goods, mayonnaise and other fatty spreads, candy, and beverages. βLike all authorized food additives, emulsiο¬ers have been evaluated by risk assessors, who consider them safe. However, there are growing concerns among scientists about their possible harmful effects on our intestinal barriers and microbiota,β in terms of causing a leaky gut. As well, they could possibly βincrease the absorption of several environmental toxins, including endocrine disruptors and carcinogensβ present in the food.
We know that the consumption of ultra-processed foods may contribute to weight gain. Healthier, longer-lived populations not only have low meat intake and high plant intake, but they also eat minimally processed foods and βhave far less chronic diseases, obesity rates, and live longer disease-free.β Based on a number of preclinical studies, it may be that the emulsifiers found in processed foods are playing a role, but who cares if βemulsifiers make rats gain weightβ? When we read that βemulsiο¬ers can cause striking changes in the microbiota,β they arenβt talking about the microbiota of humans.
Often, mice are used to study the impact on the microbiome, but βonly a few percent of the bacterial genes are shared between mice and humans.β Even the gut flora of different strains of mice can be considerably different from each other, so if we canβt even extrapolate from one type of mouse to another, how are we supposed to translate results from mice to humans? βRemarkably, there has been little study of the potential harmful effects of ingestedβ¦emulsiο¬ers in humans.β
Take lecithin, for example, which is βperhaps best known as a key component of egg yolks.β Lecithin was found to be worse than polysorbate 80 in terms of allowing bacteria to leak through the gut wall into the bloodstream. However, itβs yet to be determined whether lecithin consumption in humans causes the same problem. βThere is certainly a paucity in the data of human trials with the effects of emulsifiers in processed foods,β but we at least have data on human tissue, cells, and gut flora.
A study was titled: βDietary emulsifiers directly alter the human microbiota composition and gene expression ex vivo potentiating intestinal inflammation.β Ex vivo means outside the body. Researchers inoculated an artificial gut with fresh human feces until a stable culture was established, then added carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) or polysorbate 80 (P80), resulting in boosts in proinflammatory potential starting within one day with the carboxymethylcellulose and within the first week with polysorbate 80, as you can see below and at 3:39 in my video.

βThis approach revealed that both P80 and CMC acted directly upon human microbiota to increase its proinο¬ammatory potentialβ¦β When researchers then tested the effect of these emulsifiers on the protective mucus layer in petri dish cultures of human gut lining cells, they found that they can partially disrupt the protective layer. As you can see below and at 4:00 in my video, the green staining is the mucus. Both emulsifiers cut down the levels.

However, this study and the last both used emulsifier concentrations that were far in excess of what people might typically get day-to-day.Β
βTranslocation of Crohnβs disease Escherichia coli across M-cells: contrasting effects of soluble plant fibres and emulsifiersβ is probably the study that raised the greatest potential concern. The researchers surgically obtained cells, as well as actual intestinal wall tissue, and found that polysorbate 80 could double the invasion of E. coli through the intestinal lining tissue, as shown here and at 4:27 in my video.
In contrast, adding fiberβin this case, fiber from plantainsβcould seal up the gut wall tissue twice as tightly, as seen below and at 4:33.

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