Calcium Disodium EDTA vs Butylated Hydroxyanisole: which is worse?
Quick answer: Butylated Hydroxyanisole carries the heavier risk profile. Calcium Disodium EDTA is — in the EU and — in the US; Butylated Hydroxyanisole is — in the EU and — in the US.
| Property | Calcium Disodium EDTA | Butylated Hydroxyanisole |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | — | — |
| US status | — | — |
| Risk level | — | — |
| Banned in | — | Japan (banned for foods containing fats and oils) |
| Restricted in | European Union (restricted to specific food categories; not approved for many applications permitted in US) | European Union (restricted; banned in baby food), United Kingdom |
| Category | additive | additive |
| Where it hides | — | — |
What is Calcium Disodium EDTA?
Calcium disodium EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetate) is a chelating agent used as a food preservative. It binds metal ions (particularly iron and copper) that would otherwise catalyze oxidative and color-degradation reactions in foods. It prevents color loss, flavor changes, and bacterial growth in certain foods.
What is Butylated Hydroxyanisole?
Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) is a synthetic phenolic antioxidant preservative derived from petroleum (see also bha entry). It is a mixture of 2-BHA and 3-BHA isomers, used to prevent oxidative rancidity in fats, oils, and fat-containing foods. Chemical formula C11H16O2.
Documented risks
Calcium Disodium EDTA: EDTA chelates essential minerals including zinc, iron, calcium, and magnesium in the gut, potentially reducing absorption of these nutrients with regular consumption. Animal studies at high doses show reproductive toxicity and zinc deficiency effects. EFSA's safety assessment noted that EDTA could reduce zinc bioavailability at consumption levels that could be reached by high consumers of EDTA-containing foods. The ADI is 1.9 mg/kg body weight. EDTA's poor biodegradability also makes it an environmental concern — it accumulates in water supplies and can mobilize heavy metals in sediments.
Butylated Hydroxyanisole: IARC classifies BHA as Group 2B (possible human carcinogen) based on forestomach tumor studies in rodents at high doses. The NTP lists it as 'reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.' EFSA's 2012 review found endocrine-disrupting potential. Japan banned it for food use. The FDA permits it at 0.02% of fat content. Concerns about estrogen-receptor interaction have been documented in animal studies. Contact dermatitis from cosmetic use is reported.
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