Possible Red Yeast Rice Side Effects to Know About

Red yeast rice side effects are similar to statin drug side effects.

red yeast rice side effects

Red rice yeast can have serious side effects, including stomach pain, severe muscle pain and damage, liver damage, and kidney failure.

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The Chinese first used red yeast rice in the Tang Dynasty in 800 A.D. as an aid for stomach ailments and poor blood circulation and to improve spleen health. But today, red yeast rice supplements are most commonly advertised for lowering cholesterol naturally. (Because of their history, they’re sometimes referred to as Zhi Tai or Xue Zhi Kang.) It’s important, however, to know about red yeast rice side effects that could be potentially dangerous to your health.

What Is Red Yeast Rice?

Red yeast rice is the product of a yeast, Monascus purpureus, grown on rice. The active ingredient in these supplements is called monacolins. One of these, “monacolin K,” works by inhibiting the liver enzyme called HMG Co-A reductase, thus reducing the liver’s ability to make cholesterol. Monacolin K is also the active pharmaceutical ingredient in the cholesterol-lowering statin drugs known as lovastatin or mevinolin (Mevacor, a drug produced by Merck & Co. Inc).

In fact, lovastatin was originally derived from another type of red yeast called Monascus ruber and it was the first statin drug to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Although red yeast rice is classified as a dietary supplement by the FDA, because of its similarity to the statin drugs, there is an ongoing legal debate about whether red yeast rice should be reclassified as a prescription drug rather than a dietary supplement.

Red Yeast Rice Side Effects

Since they’re so closely related, the potentially serious and debilitating statin drug side effects are also the same as those for red yeast rice and monacolin k side effects: stomach pain, severe muscle pain and damage, liver damage, and kidney failure.

The use of red yeast rice, however, is particularly troublesome because of the uncertainty regarding how much active drug any particular batch of red yeast rice contains.

Side Effects of Taking Red Yeast Rice Induced by Toxic By-Product

As if taking a hidden pharmaceutical drug were not bad enough, there’s another insidious ingredient lurking in red yeast rice called citrinin.

So what is citrinin? Citrinin in red yeast rice is a mycotoxin—a toxic by-product emitted from fungus (yeast). Mycotoxins literally mean “fungal + poison” and are considered very hazardous contaminants. In fact, some mycotoxins are so toxic, they have been utilized as chemical warfare agents.[1]

The mycotoxin citrinin was first isolated from Penicillium citrinum before World War II. It is produced by more than 10 kinds of fungi, including the Monascus purpureus red rice yeast, and is possibly spread all over the world in other cereal grains including corn, wheat, barley, and rye.

Citrinin side effects include mild liver damage in the form of fatty infiltration. Other health effects include vasodilation (dilation of blood vessels), constriction of the bronchi (air passage to the lungs) and muscle damage.

Citrinin often co-occurs with another mycotoxin called ochratoxin-A. Both of these toxins have been linked to nephropathy (a disease of the kidneys) in animals. However, research also demonstrates that citrinin and ochratoxin-A are implicated in fatal human kidney disease. Citrinin is also embryocidal and fetotoxic, so red yeast rice is especially dangerous for consumption by pregnant women.

How to Avoid Side Effects from Red Yeast Rice

The best way to avoid the red yeast rice side effects is to avoid taking the supplement altogether. Too many other good alternatives for lowering high cholesterol exist that don’t carry all the baggage of red yeast rice.

SOURCES

[1] Clin Microbiol Rev. 2003 July; 16(3): 497–516. doi: 10.1128/CMR.16.3.497-516.2003.

[2] BMC Genomics. 2007; 8: 95. Published online 2007 April 5. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-8-95

[3] “Citrinin.” Leatherhead Food Research Association, Randalls Road, Leatherhead, Surrey KT22 7RY, England.

[4] Hetherington, A. C., and H. Raistrick. 1931. Studies in the biochemistry of microorganisms. Part XIV. On the production and chemical constitution of a new yellow colouring matter, citrinin, produced from glucose by Penicillium citrinum Thom. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. London Ser. B 220B:269-295.

[5] Arh Hig Rada Toksikol. 2009 Dec;60(4):457-64.


Originally published in 2012, this post has been updated.


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Jami Cooley, RN, CNWC

Jami Cooley is a Certified Nutrition and Wellness Consultant as well as a Registered Nurse, but her interest in integrative medicine grew out of her experience in conventional medicine. Cooley … Read More

View all posts by Jami Cooley, RN, CNWC

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