Here’s a question most gout sufferers never think to ask: why does uric acid actually cause pain?
The uric acid itself isn’t the problem. The pain starts when levels get too high and crystals form in your joints.
Your immune system treats those crystals like an invader and launches a full inflammatory response. Swelling, heat, redness, and pain that can wake you up at 2am.
If you’ve had a gout attack, you know exactly what that feels like.
Reducing uric acid levels is the long-term goal. But managing that inflammatory response matters just as much during a flare.
That’s where bromelain comes in.
What Is Bromelain?
Bromelain is a group of proteolytic enzymes extracted from the stem and fruit of pineapples.
“Proteolytic” means it breaks down proteins, which is why pineapple can tenderise meat and why your mouth feels weird after eating too much of it.
But bromelain does far more than break down your steak. It’s been studied extensively for its anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and anti-swelling properties.
It’s used in clinical settings for everything from post-surgical recovery to sports injuries to sinusitis.
For gout sufferers dealing with painful inflammatory flare-ups, bromelain is a practical, research-backed addition to your toolkit.
How Bromelain Helps With Gout
Bromelain doesn’t directly lower uric acid levels like tart cherry or celery seed. Its role is different, and arguably just as important during a gout attack.
1. It reduces the inflammatory response to uric acid crystals.
When uric acid crystallises in your joints, your body produces inflammatory mediators like prostaglandins, bradykinin, and thromboxane. Bromelain has been shown to reduce the production of these compounds, which means less swelling and less pain during gout flares.
Think of it this way: tart cherry and celery seed work on the cause (high uric acid). Bromelain works on the consequence (the brutal inflammatory response during a gout attack). You need both.
2. It supports the breakdown of inflammatory proteins.
As a proteolytic enzyme, bromelain physically breaks down proteins involved in the inflammation cascade.
This is a different mechanism from how turmeric or tart cherry manage inflammation, which means bromelain adds a unique layer of support rather than duplicating what other ingredients already do.
3. It may improve absorption of other compounds.
There’s evidence that bromelain enhances the bioavailability of other supplements and even medications. When included in a multi-ingredient formula, it may help your body absorb and utilise the other active compounds more effectively.
What the Research Says
Bromelain’s anti-inflammatory properties have been studied for decades.
Here are the highlights most relevant to gout.
Maurer (2001) – Systematic review of bromelain’s clinical evidence
This review examined multiple clinical trials and concluded that bromelain demonstrated significant anti-inflammatory and analgesic effects, particularly for conditions involving joint inflammation and swelling. The evidence supported its use as a complementary approach alongside conventional gout treatments.
Brien et al. (2004) – Bromelain and joint inflammation
Researchers reviewed the evidence for bromelain’s effect on inflammatory joint conditions. They found consistent reductions in swelling, pain, and stiffness across multiple studies. The effect was dose-dependent, meaning higher doses produced stronger results, up to a point.
Walker et al. (2002) – Enzyme therapy for inflammation
This study examined proteolytic enzymes including bromelain for managing inflammatory conditions. The results showed significant improvements in pain and function scores, with fewer side effects than NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen).
For anyone who’s been popping ibuprofen during gout attacks, that last point is worth paying attention to.
The research consistently points to one thing: bromelain is a legitimate anti-inflammatory with a strong safety profile.
How Much Bromelain Do You Need?
Bromelain dosage is measured in GDU (gelatin dissolving units), which reflects its enzymatic activity, not just weight.
This is important because two supplements could both contain 25mg of bromelain, but have very different GDU values depending on the quality of the extract.
Typical research dosages:
- Anti-inflammatory support: 200-500mg per day, often split across doses
- As part of a multi-ingredient formula: 20-50mg provides meaningful enzymatic support alongside other anti-inflammatory ingredients
- Higher doses (up to 1,000mg) have been used in clinical settings for acute inflammation
When bromelain is included as part of a comprehensive formula with other anti-inflammatory ingredients like turmeric and tart cherry, you don’t need a standalone therapeutic dose. It works synergistically with the other compounds.
URICAH contains 25mg of bromelain per serve. This is an intentional, supporting dose designed to complement the other anti-inflammatory ingredients in the formula.
How Bromelain Works With Other Gout Ingredients
This is where it gets interesting.
Bromelain fills a specific gap rather than trying to do the same job as every other ingredient.
- Tart cherry extract inhibits xanthine oxidase and reduces uric acid production. It also has anti-inflammatory properties from anthocyanins. Bromelain adds a different type of anti-inflammatory action through protein breakdown.
- Turmeric (curcumin) is one of the most studied natural anti-inflammatories. It works primarily through the NF-kB pathway. Bromelain works through proteolytic activity. Different mechanisms, complementary results. There’s even research suggesting bromelain enhances curcumin absorption.
- Celery seed extract focuses on uric acid excretion through the kidneys. Bromelain focuses on managing the fallout when uric acid is still elevated. They’re solving different parts of the same problem.
This is why a well-designed multi-ingredient formula outperforms any single ingredient for gout. Each one handles a different piece of the puzzle.
Learn what to look for in a gout supplement
Side Effects and Safety
Bromelain has an excellent safety profile when used at recommended doses.
A few things to keep in mind:
- Digestive sensitivity: Some people experience mild nausea or diarrhoea, particularly at higher doses. Taking it with food usually helps.
- Allergies: If you’re allergic to pineapple, avoid bromelain. Obvious, but worth stating.
- Blood thinners: Bromelain has mild anticoagulant properties. If you’re on blood-thinning medication, talk to your doctor before adding it.
- Gout medications: If you’re on allopurinol or colchicine, check with your healthcare provider before adding bromelain. Your overall management plan should be coordinated.
- Surgery: Because of the blood-thinning effect, it’s generally recommended to stop bromelain supplements two weeks before any scheduled surgery.
For the vast majority of people, bromelain is safe and well tolerated.
The Bottom Line
Bromelain won’t single-handedly fix your gout.
That’s not its job.
Its job is to manage the inflammatory response that makes gout attacks so excruciating. And it does that job well.
When combined with ingredients that actually reduce uric acid levels (tart cherry, celery seed, chanca piedra) and other anti-inflammatories that work through different pathways (turmeric), bromelain rounds out a comprehensive gout management approach.
Don’t overlook the enzyme from the pineapple. It earns its place.
URICAH contains 25mg of bromelain alongside 13 other clearly labelled ingredients. Every dosage is on the label. No proprietary blends. No guessing.
See the full URICAH ingredient list
Try URICAH with a 90-day money-back guarantee and free AU shipping
This article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your health routine.


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