Metal Risk Assessment Study of Canned Fish Available on the Iranian Market

被引:0
|
作者
Borhan Mansouri
Nammam Ali Azadi
Marzena Albrycht
Lukasz J. Binkowski
Martyna Błaszczyk
Unes Hamesadeghi
Raouf Rahmani
Afshin Maleki
Farshid Majnoni
机构
[1] Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences,Substance Abuse Prevention Research Center, Health Institute
[2] Iran University of Medical Sciences,Biostatistics Department, School of Public Health
[3] Pedagogical University of Krakow,Institute of Biology
[4] Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences,Department of Environmental Health Engineering
[5] Birjand University,Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment
来源
关键词
Food safety; THQ; MoE; Cancer risk; Non-cancer risk;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Iran is the largest fishery producer in the region reaching nearly 1 million tons. Fish provide a good many nutrients that are beneficial for our health. Due to significant deposits of xenobiotics in the water environments, however, fish may also be a source of non-essential metals, causing a variety of disorders. The main challenges to Iranian fisheries are environmental pollution and quality control, so this study aims to estimate the concentration of cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), nickel (Ni), and lead (Pb) in canned tuna fish produced and consumed in Iran. We studied four popular brands (N = 4 × 20) with ICP-MS and then looked at the concentrations and calculated the risk assessment parameters. We found that the lowest concentration was observed for Cd (18 μg/kg) and the highest for Ni (132 μg/kg). Among the brands studied, Pb concentrations differed most (42.0 to 113.3 μg/kg) and Hg levels were more consistent (24.0 and 39.4 μg/kg). The concentrations of Cd, Hg, and Pb in all the brands tested were below EU permissible thresholds. The intake estimation risk assessment parameters (EDI, contribution to PTWI, and CR) and non-cancer risk assessment parameters based on reference doses (THQ and HI) demonstrated the safety of tested products in respect to all metal concentrations studied, while the parameters regarding the toxic effects (MoE, and ILCR) showed that the consumption might cause health risks in terms of Cd (ILCR), Ni (ILCR), and Pb (MoE). The consumption of the canned fish studied should therefore be maintained at a reasonable level (2–5 meals containing fish weekly), so that it may provide necessary nutrients, while avoiding the health risk due to metal content.
引用
收藏
页码:3470 / 3477
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Determination of the Level of Selected Elements in Canned Meat and Fish and Risk Assessment for Consumer Health
    Kowalska, Grazyna
    Pankiewicz, Urszula
    Kowalski, Radoslaw
    JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL METHODS IN CHEMISTRY, 2020, 2020
  • [22] Heavy metals and PAHs in canned fish supplies on the Serbian market
    Novakov, Nikolina J.
    Mihaljev, Zeljko A.
    Kartalovic, Brankica D.
    Blagojevic, Bojan J.
    Petrovic, Jelana M.
    Cirkovic, Miroslav A.
    Rogan, Dragan R.
    FOOD ADDITIVES & CONTAMINANTS PART B-SURVEILLANCE, 2017, 10 (03): : 208 - 215
  • [23] Assessment of heavy metal contamination in herbal medicinal products consumed in the Iranian market
    Keshvari, Mahtab
    Nedaeinia, Reza
    Nedaeinia, Mozhdeh
    Ferns, Gordon A.
    Nia, Sasan Nedaee
    Asgary, Sedigheh
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2021, 28 (25) : 33208 - 33218
  • [24] Assessment of heavy metal contamination in herbal medicinal products consumed in the Iranian market
    Mahtab Keshvari
    Reza Nedaeinia
    Mozhdeh Nedaeinia
    Gordon A. Ferns
    Sasan Nedaee Nia
    Sedigheh Asgary
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2021, 28 : 33208 - 33218
  • [25] Health Risk Assessment of Some Heavy Metals from Canned Tuna and Fish in Tijuana, Mexico
    Dolores Rodriguez-Mendivil, Diana
    Garcia-Flores, Enrique
    Temores-Pena, Juan
    Toyohiko Wakida, Fernando
    HEALTH SCOPE, 2019, 8 (02):
  • [26] Concentration of potential toxic elements in canned tuna fish: systematic review and health risk assessment
    Mahmudiono, Trias
    Fakhri, Yadolah
    Adiban, Moayed
    Sarafraz, Mansour
    Mohamadi, Sara
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH, 2024, 34 (07) : 2619 - 2637
  • [27] Risk assessment of mercury and lead in fish species from Iranian international wetlands
    Zolfaghari, Ghasem
    METHODSX, 2018, 5 : 438 - 447
  • [28] Risk of Mercury Ingestion from Canned Fish in Poland
    Pawlaczyk, Aleksandra
    Przerywacz, Anna
    Gajek, Magdalena
    Szynkowska-Jozwik, Malgorzata Iwona
    MOLECULES, 2020, 25 (24):
  • [29] Assessment of heavy metal contamination risk in dry fish from India: A comprehensive study
    Sonone, Sagar D.
    Jorvekar, Sachin B.
    Naik, Dhanavath Dattu
    Saharia, Nilotpal
    Borkar, Roshan M.
    FOOD CONTROL, 2025, 167
  • [30] Heavy metal and essential elements in beers from turkey market: A risk assessment study
    Charehsaz, M.
    Helvacioglu, S.
    Cetinkaya, S.
    Demir, R.
    Erdem, O.
    Aydin, A.
    HUMAN & EXPERIMENTAL TOXICOLOGY, 2021, 40 (08) : 1241 - 1249