Many of us choose brown rice over white believing it’s the healthier option. With its extra fiber, vitamins, and nutrients preserved in the bran layer, brown rice has earned a reputation as a nutritional powerhouse. But concerning research reveals this “health food” may harbor a hidden danger—significantly higher levels of toxic arsenic than its white counterpart.
A new study from Michigan State University researchers, published in the journal Risk Analysis, highlights an uncomfortable truth: the very part of brown rice that makes it nutritionally superior—the bran—also concentrates dangerous inorganic arsenic, a known carcinogen.
“Rice bran and brown rice are shown to have a higher arsenic content and inorganic arsenic concentration than the grain endosperm or white rice,” the researchers warn in their findings. This elevated concentration occurs because arsenic from soil and water accumulates primarily in the outer layers of the rice grain—precisely the parts removed during processing to create white rice.
For adults, the arsenic exposure differences between brown and white rice likely won’t pose significant health risks, researchers say. But the study sounds a particular alarm about young children—especially those under age 5—who consume relatively more food per pound of body weight than adults.
Children ages 6-24 months who regularly consume brown rice showed particularly troubling exposure levels, with inorganic arsenic intake potentially exceeding safety thresholds previously established by international food safety authorities. The researchers calculated that some infants and toddlers consuming brown rice might ingest arsenic at levels of 0.295 micrograms per kilogram of body weight daily—exceeding the recommended safe limit of 0.21 micrograms.
Rice naturally absorbs more arsenic than most crops, taking up nearly 10 times more arsenic from soil than other grains. This happens because rice grows in flooded paddies, creating conditions where arsenic becomes more bioavailable. Once absorbed through the roots, arsenic concentrates in the outer layers of the rice grain.
Scientists have identified several forms of arsenic in rice, but inorganic arsenic poses the greatest concern. This form is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen by international health authorities and has been linked to various cancers, cardiovascular disease, and other serious health problems.
The researchers collected and analyzed data on rice consumption from the “What We Eat in America” database, which tracks the dietary patterns of a nationally representative sample of Americans. They then estimated arsenic exposure by combining this consumption data with arsenic concentration measurements from dozens of studies that directly compared arsenic levels in brown versus white rice.
Their analysis revealed that brown rice contained approximately 24% more total arsenic than white rice and about 40% more inorganic arsenic. Even more concerning, rice bran—the component that makes brown rice “brown”—contained arsenic concentrations roughly 10 times higher than the rice endosperm (the white interior portion).
Source: https://studyfinds.org/arsenic-levels-much-higher-in-brown-rice-than-white-rice-study-confirms/