Sara J Lupton
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摘要

多溴联苯醚(PBDEs)是一类溴化阻燃剂,人类可能会通过食用受污染的食品而接触到多溴联苯醚。自 2007 年起,美国每 5 年收集一次肉类和家禽样本(牛肉、猪肉、鸡肉、火鸡),以评估多溴联苯醚的含量和消费者接触七种多溴联苯醚的情况。牛肉、猪肉、鸡肉、火鸡、奶牛和硅鱼(鲶鱼)的∑PBDE 平均浓度分别为 0.19、0.48、0.11、0.60、0.28 纳克/克脂重(lw)和 2.5 纳克/克湿重(ww)。所有肉类的ΣPBDE 含量介于 0.005 至 17.7 纳克/克脂重之间。将2018-19年的调查与2007-08年和2012-13年的调查进行比较后发现,所有四类肉类的ΣPBDE残留量中位数总体下降,其中猪肉、鸡肉和火鸡肉的中位数显著下降,降幅在40% - 45%之间。与之前的调查一样,BDE 47 和 99 在ΣPBDE 浓度中所占的百分比高于其他多溴二苯醚同系物,这表明五溴二苯醚配方可能是动物的一个接触源。据估计,美国消费者每天从肉类和家禽中摄入的多溴联苯醚为 5.0 纳克/天,与 2012-13 年调查得出的 6.4 纳克/天相比有所下降。
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Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in US meat, poultry, and siluriformes: 2018-19 levels, trends, and estimated consumer exposures.

Human exposure to polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), a class of brominated flame retardants, can occur through consumption of contaminated foods. Since 2007, U.S. meat and poultry samples (beef, pork, chicken, turkey) have been collected every 5 years to assess PBDE levels and consumer exposure to seven PBDEs. Mean ∑PBDE concentrations from beef, pork, chickens, turkeys, dairy cows, and siluriformes (catfish) were 0.19, 0.48, 0.11, 0.60, 0.28 ng/g lipid weight (lw), and 2.5 ng/g wet weight (ww). The ΣPBDEs for all meat classes ranged from 0.005 to 17.7 ng/g lw. Comparison of the 2018-19 survey to the 2007-08 and 2012-13 surveys revealed an overall decrease in the median ΣPBDE residue for all four meat classes with significant reductions in the medians, at 40 - 45%, for pork, chicken, and turkey. As in the previous surveys, BDEs 47 and 99 had higher percentage contributions to the ΣPBDE concentrations than other PBDE congeners, which indicated the penta-BDE formulation was a likely exposure source for animals. An estimate of U.S. consumer daily intake of PBDEs from meat and poultry was 5.0 ng/day which is a decrease from the 2012-13 survey of 6.4 ng/day.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
6.90%
发文量
136
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Food Additives & Contaminants: Part A publishes original research papers and critical reviews covering analytical methodology, occurrence, persistence, safety evaluation, detoxification and regulatory control of natural and man-made additives and contaminants in the food and animal feed chain. Papers are published in the areas of food additives including flavourings, pesticide and veterinary drug residues, environmental contaminants, plant toxins, mycotoxins, marine biotoxins, trace elements, migration from food packaging, food process contaminants, adulteration, authenticity and allergenicity of foods. Papers are published on animal feed where residues and contaminants can give rise to food safety concerns. Contributions cover chemistry, biochemistry and bioavailability of these substances, factors affecting levels during production, processing, packaging and storage; the development of novel foods and processes; exposure and risk assessment.
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