香港和旧金山市场干鱼中的汞:对人类健康的影响

Dan Vallentyne, Ziyang Zhao, Tak Yung Lee, David McGuire
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引用次数: 0

摘要

旧金山的亚裔、亚太岛民和亚裔美国人比美国其他人口群体更容易接触汞,以及与鱼类消费甲基汞毒性相关的相关健康风险。由于每年的鱼类消费量较高,香港中国居民接触甲基汞的风险较高。目的:我们调查了来自旧金山和香港的市场干鱼样本,这些样本是亚裔和亚裔美国人通常食用的鱼类中汞污染的潜在来源。方法:采用电感耦合等离子体发射光谱法和冷蒸气原子荧光光谱法对旧金山和香港81份市售干鱼样品进行汞浓度分析。我们将其分为市场类别、营养级和栖息地类型进行统计分析。结果:旧金山和香港的样本中汞含量没有显著差异(p值=0.47)。干燥样本的汞含量高于FDA报告的湿样本。来自市场鱼类干样本的数据也显示了生物累积的证据:高营养级鱼类中毒素的浓度(p值<0.01)。为了消除顶级捕食者,几乎所有来自这两个地点和低营养级的鱼类样本的含量都低于最低健康咨询阈值0.5 ppm甲基汞重量。讨论:旧金山和香港市场的干鱼样本显示,汞含量有可能超过EPA和EFSA制定的指南,但消费率尚不清楚消费者是否真的超过了这一阈值。我们就市场鱼类干的健康风险以及食用或避免食用某些营养组的鱼类提出建议。
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Mercury in Dried Market Fish of Hong Kong and San Francisco: Human Health Implications
Asian, Asian Pacific Islanders, and Asian American residents of San Francisco have higher exposure to mercury and the associated health risks associated with methylmercury toxicity from fish consumption than other demographics across the United States. Due to their higher annual fish consumption, Hong Kong Chinese residents have elevated  risks to methylmercury exposure. Objectives: We investigate samples of dried market fish from San Francisco and from Hong Kong as potential sources of mercury contamination in fish commonly consumed by Asian and Asian American residents. Methods: We analyze 81 samples of dried market fish from San Francisco and Hong Kong for mercury concentration using Inductively Coupled Plasma Emission Spectrograph and Processing Cold Vapor Atomic Fluorescence Spectrometry. We binned into market categories, trophic level, and habitat type for statistical analysis. Results: No significant difference was observed in the mercury levels of samples between San Francisco and Hong Kong (p-value = 0.47). Dried samples did show higher rates of mercury than wet samples reported by the FDA. Data from dried market fish samples also show evidence of bioaccumulation: the concentration of toxins in higher trophic levels of fish (p-value < 0.01). Eliminating apex predators, nearly all samples of fish from both locations and from lower trophic levels had levels below the lowest health advisory thresholds of 0.5 ppm methylmercury by weight. Discussion: Dried fish samples from markets in San Francisco and Hong Kong showed mercury levels with the potential to exceed guidelines set by the EPA and the EFSA, but consumption rates are lacking to know if this threshold is actually being exceeded by consumers. We make recommendations regarding the health risks of dried market fish and of consuming or avoiding fish from certain trophic groups.
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