Cartography Carmine red has been used in military cartography at least since the 17th century.
Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban, General Engineer of France, recommended the use of this red pigment to represent fortifications (ramparts, wood timbers, and brick buildings being reddish). This made buildings more distinct on maps
Cosmetics Carmine is present in numerous cosmetics because of its red color. This use has continued from antiquity to the present. It can be found in lipstick, eye shadow, nail polish. It may cause allergies.
Histology Carmine can be used in
histology, as ''Best's carmine
to stain glycogen, mucicarmine
to stain acidic mucopolysaccharides, and carmalum'' to stain
cell nuclei. In these applications, it is applied together with a
mordant, usually an
Al(III) salt.
Medicine Cochineal, the insect used to make carmine, also has medical properties that were exploited by the Aztecs. It is said to help cure wounds when mixed with vinegar and applied to lesions. Aztecs used it to clean teeth.
Regulations for use in foods dye. Now it is used as a coloring for
yogurt and other food products.
United States In January 2006, the
United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) evaluated a proposal that would require food products containing carmine to list it by name on the ingredient label. It was also announced that the FDA will separately review the ingredient labels of prescription drugs that contain colorings derived from carmine. A request from the
Center for Science in the Public Interest urging the FDA to require ingredient labels to explicitly state that carmine is derived from insects and may cause severe allergic reactions and anaphylactic shock was declined by the FDA. Food industries were aggressively opposed to the idea of writing "insect-based" on the label, and the FDA agreed to allow "cochineal extract" or "carmine".
European Union In the
European Union (EU), the use of carmine in foods is regulated under the
European Commission's directives governing food additives in general and food dyes in particular and listed under the names
Cochineal,
Carminic acid,
Carmines and
Natural Red 4 as additive E 120 in the
list of EU-approved food additives. The directive governing food dyes approves the use of carmine for certain groups of foods only and specifies a maximum amount which is permitted or restricts it to the
quantum satis. The EU-Directive 2000/13/EC on food labeling mandates that carmines (like all food additives) must be included in the list of ingredients of a food product with its additive category and listed name or additive number, that is either as
Food colour carmines or as
Food colour E 120 in the local language(s) of the market(s) the product is sold in. , the
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has changed the way they allow use of Carmine E120 for pharmaceutical products. EFSA had raised concerns over the increasing number of allergic reactions to carmine derived from insects (E120.360), when used within the
British Pharmacopoeia. Pharmaceutical products which had previously contained insect-derived carmine, have been replaced with a synthesized version of the food colorant. Internal studies have shown that the new formulations of popular anti-nausea and weight-gain liquid medication had a significantly lower risk in terms of allergic reactions. The new formulation is known to be of plant origin, using
calcium oxide to gauge color depth. ==See also==