Is Indigo Carmine Toxic in Strepsils?

  • Thread starter Thread starter rohanprabhu
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Toxicity
AI Thread Summary
Indigo Carmine is noted for its potential harm to the respiratory tract if swallowed and as an irritant to skin and eyes, according to its Wikipedia entry. However, its inclusion in products like Strepsils, which lists it as a permitted colorant, raises questions about its safety in small doses. The discussion highlights the principle that toxicity is often dose-dependent, suggesting that while Indigo Carmine may be harmful in larger quantities, the minimal amounts used in medicinal products are likely safe. The consensus leans towards the idea that the dye is used in negligible quantities primarily for aesthetic purposes.
rohanprabhu
Messages
410
Reaction score
2
When I checked the wikipedia page for Indigo Carmine, the article there says : "Indigo carmine is harmful to the respiratory tract if swallowed. It is also an irritant to the skin and eyes.".

But on a Streplis pack, menthol flavour it says: "Contains permitted colours: Indigo Carmine".

If it was as toxic as it is said on wpedia, it shouldn't be a part of medicines even in a small amount.. so what exactly is the case?
 
Biology news on Phys.org
There is a saying "toxicity is just dosage".
Pretty much anything is bad for you in high enough doses, even Oxygen and water - similairly almost anything is harmful in small enough amounts.

I suspect that there is very very little of the dye needed to make the strepsils a pretty colour.
 
https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/conditions/body-dysmorphia/ Most people have some mild apprehension about their body, such as one thinks their nose is too big, hair too straight or curvy. At the extreme, cases such as this, are difficult to completely understand. https://www.msn.com/en-ca/health/other/why-would-someone-want-to-amputate-healthy-limbs/ar-AA1MrQK7?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=68ce4014b1fe4953b0b4bd22ef471ab9&ei=78 they feel like they're an amputee in the body of a regular person "For...
Thread 'Did they discover another descendant of homo erectus?'
The study provides critical new insights into the African Humid Period, a time between 14,500 and 5,000 years ago when the Sahara desert was a green savanna, rich in water bodies that facilitated human habitation and the spread of pastoralism. Later aridification turned this region into the world's largest desert. Due to the extreme aridity of the region today, DNA preservation is poor, making this pioneering ancient DNA study all the more significant. Genomic analyses reveal that the...
Whenever these opiods are mentioned they usually mention that e.g. fentanyl is "50 times stronger than heroin" and "100 times stronger than morphine". Now it's nitazene which the public is told is everything from "much stronger than heroin" and "200 times stronger than fentany"! Do these numbers make sense at all? How do they arrive at them? Kill thousands of mice? En passant: nitazene have already been found in both Oxycontin pills and in street "heroin" here, so Naloxone is more...

Similar threads

Back
Top