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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Infants have a more restricted diet and they
generally consume more food on a body weight basis than
adults. Therefore, the significance and potential health risk
of any contaminant in foods consumed by infants is
increased and diligent attention must be paid to this
particular area. The present study aims to determine the
occurrence of aflatoxin M1 (AFM1), aflatoxin B1 (AFB1)
and ochratoxin A (OTA) in processed cereal-based foods
(flours) and infant formulae (milk powder) available in the
Portuguese market, both sold as conventional and organic
origin. Mycotoxin determination was carried out using a
method previously applied to duplicate diet samples. This
method employed chloroform extraction, liquid–liquid
extraction, immunoaffinity column (IAC) cleanup and
HPLC analysis with fluorescence detection after postcolumn
derivatisation. Quantification limits were 0.014,
0.004 and 0.028 μg kg−
1 for AFM1, AFB1 and OTA,
respectively. These toxins could only be quantified in 12 of 27 analysed samples (15 positive results): two samples
with AFM1, two samples with AFM1 and OTA, one
sample with AFB1 and OTA and seven samples with OTA.
Positive results concerned four for AFM1 (26%), one for
AFB1 (7%) and ten for OTA (67%). For these samples,
contents ranged between 0.017–0.041 μg AFM1 kg−1,
0.034–0.212 μg OTA kg−1, and one sample had a value of
0.009 μg AFB1 kg−1. Considering the presented results,
we could provisionally conclude that the presence of these
mycotoxins in baby foods does not constitute a public
health problem. These are the first results concerning the
occurrence of mycotoxins in marketed baby foods in
Portugal and this is the first study using the HPLC
method, proposed for duplicate diets, in baby food sample
analysis.
Description
Keywords
Aflatoxins Ochratoxin A Baby Foods HPLC Segurança Alimentar
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Food Anal. Methods 2010;3(1):22–30. Epub 2008 Dec 3
