Comparing E14XX - Modified Starch vs E927B - Carbamide

Synonyms
E14XX
Modified Starch
E927b
Carbamide
urea
Products

Found in 1,020 products

Found in 44 products

Search rank & volume
#306600 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#4864.7K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

×0.09
under-aware

×193.06
over-aware

Search volume over time

Interest over time for 2 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. What is modified food starch?

    A group of plant-based starches that have been physically, enzymatically, or chemically treated to change how they behave in foods—improving thickening, stability, freeze–thaw performance, or emulsification (E1400–E1452).

  2. Is modified food starch gluten free?

    Often yes when sourced from corn, potato, tapioca, or rice; if it’s from wheat, it can contain gluten unless specially processed and labeled gluten-free. In the US/EU, wheat-derived modified starch must be declared as “wheat,” so check the allergen statement or a gluten-free claim.

  3. What is modified corn starch?

    Modified starch made from corn that’s been treated to improve thickening, stability, and resistance to heat, acid, or shear; commonly used in sauces, soups, dressings, and desserts.

  4. Is modified corn starch gluten free?

    Yes—corn is naturally gluten-free, and modified corn starch remains gluten-free; only potential cross-contact is a concern, so rely on allergen statements or a gluten-free label if needed.

  5. What is modified wheat starch?

    Starch from wheat that has been modified to alter its functionality (e.g., thicker, more stable or freeze–thaw tolerant); it may retain some gluten unless specifically purified and labeled gluten-free. “Wheat” must appear in allergen labeling in many regions.

  1. What is blood urea nitrogen?

    Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) measures the amount of nitrogen in your blood that comes from urea (carbamide, E927b), a protein-metabolism waste product; it’s commonly used to assess kidney function and hydration.

  2. What is urea cream?

    A topical product containing urea (carbamide) typically 2–40% that hydrates skin as a humectant and, at higher strengths, softens and exfoliates thick, dry, or scaly skin as a keratolytic.

  3. What is urea nitrogen?

    Urea nitrogen is the nitrogen portion of urea measured in clinical tests like BUN, indicating how much urea-derived nitrogen is in the blood.

  4. What is urea in def?

    Urea (carbamide, E927b) is a simple organic compound, CO(NH2)2, the main nitrogenous waste in humans, made synthetically and used in fertilizers, skin products, and as a food processing aid/yeast nutrient.

  5. What does urea do for skin?

    It draws water into the outer skin layers to moisturize (humectant) and, at higher concentrations, breaks down hardened keratin to smooth rough or callused skin (keratolytic).