Health Hazard Assessment Due to Slimming Medicinal Plant Intake

被引:0
|
作者
Laís Caroline Werdemberg dos Santos
Daniela Granja Arakaki
Elaine Silva de Pádua Melo
Valter Aragão Nascimento
机构
[1] Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul,GEBABS
[2] Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul, Group of Spectroscopy and Bioinformatics Applied Biodiversity and Health
来源
关键词
Heavy metals; Safety; Elemental content; Medicinal plants;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), about 80% of people rely on medicinal plants for their primary health needs. Traditional medicine’s principal benefits are their vast population knowledge, low severe adverse effects rate, low cost, and the lack of a medical prescription to use them. While obesity has become a global health issue, an increase in finding cheap and fast ways to lose weight escalates medicinal herbs’ use for this purpose, both in dietary supplements or in teas. At the same time that Brazil aims to expand traditional medicine, reports regarding toxicology and poisoning put natural products’ safety in check. Plants can accumulate heavy metals and metalloids leading to health risks; however, there is a lack of information on that matter, possibly due to a lack of international standardization regarding elemental contamination — this study aimed to determine metal and metalloid concentrations in slimming medicinal plants and their respective teas and evaluate their safety consumption. Metal and metalloid content were determined by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP OES). All plants and teas were within the set limits for tolerable upper intake level (UL), provisional tolerable daily maximum intake (PTDMI), and provisional tolerable weekly intake (PTWI). The hazard quotient index (HQ) was above 1 for almost all plants, and the Hibiscus sabdariffa tea regarding aluminum content. The arsenic level was above the Brazilian Pharmacopeia limit in natura plants demonstrating risk in their consumption. Some herbs also presented detection for elements with no safety limits set, such as lead, cadmium, and arsenic, which could mark as a red flag for consumption once their security intake is not precise yet.
引用
收藏
页码:1442 / 1454
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Health Hazard Assessment Due to Slimming Medicinal Plant Intake
    Werdemberg dos Santos, Lais Caroline
    Arakaki, Daniela Granja
    de Padua Melo, Elaine Silva
    Nascimento, Valter Aragao
    BIOLOGICAL TRACE ELEMENT RESEARCH, 2022, 200 (03) : 1442 - 1454
  • [2] Assessment of health hazard due to natural radioactivity in Kluang District, Johor, Malaysia
    Saleh, Muneer Aziz
    Ramli, Ahmad Termizi
    Alajerami, Yasser
    Damoom, Mohammed
    Aliyu, Abubakar Sadiq
    ISOTOPES IN ENVIRONMENTAL AND HEALTH STUDIES, 2014, 50 (01) : 103 - 113
  • [3] Los Angeles County Department of Public Health's Health Hazard Assessment: Putting the "Health" Into Hazard Assessment
    Dean, Brandon
    Bagwell, Dee Ann
    Dora, Vinita
    Khan, Sinan
    Plough, Alonzo
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH MANAGEMENT AND PRACTICE, 2013, 19 : S84 - S90
  • [4] RETROSPECTIVE HAZARD IDENTIFICATION AND ASSESSMENT OF AGEING PLANT
    McBride, Marc
    Marsh, Chris
    Herbert, Ian
    Robinson, Clive
    HAZARDS XXI: PROCESS SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, 2009, (155): : 468 - 476
  • [5] A SAMPLER FOR RESPIRATORY HEALTH HAZARD ASSESSMENT
    ANDERSEN, AA
    AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 1966, 27 (02): : 160 - &
  • [6] Medicinal plant-based health products: Where is the medicinal constituent?
    Mathur, R.
    Velpandian, T.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 2009, 41 (04) : 205 - 206
  • [7] AN ASSESSMENT OF HEALTH-HAZARD HEALTH RISK APPRAISAL
    WAGNER, EH
    BEERY, WL
    SCHOENBACH, VJ
    GRAHAM, RM
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1982, 72 (04) : 347 - 352
  • [8] Uncertainty Assessment of Flood Hazard Due to Levee Breaching
    Goeury, Cedric
    Bacchi, Vito
    Zaoui, Fabrice
    Bacchi, Sophie
    Pavan, Sara
    El Kadi Abderrezzak, Kamal
    WATER, 2022, 14 (23)
  • [9] Assessment of the hazard due to fragment projection: A case study
    Tugnoli, Alessandro
    Milazzo, Maria Francesca
    Landucci, Gabriele
    Cozzani, Valerio
    Maschio, Giuseppe
    JOURNAL OF LOSS PREVENTION IN THE PROCESS INDUSTRIES, 2014, 28 : 36 - 46
  • [10] Trichinosis As Health Hazard Due To Wrong Declared Horsemeat
    Gerber, Alexander
    Zitnik, Simona
    ZENTRALBLATT FUR ARBEITSMEDIZIN ARBEITSSCHUTZ UND ERGONOMIE, 2013, 63 (02): : 116 - 117