4.5 Article

Potential toxic elements (PTEs) concentration in wheat and flour products in Iran: A probabilistic risk assessment

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e11803

Keywords

Potential toxic elements (PTEs); Wheat; Flour; Monte Carlo simulation; Health risk assessment

Funding

  1. Tehran University of Medical Sciences
  2. [IR.TUMS.SPH.REC.1397.300]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study assessed the concentration of potential toxic elements in wheat, flour, and bread samples in Iran and examined the impact of the milling process on the levels of these elements. The results indicated that the concentrations of potential toxic elements in the samples were within permissible limits set by regulatory authorities. The health risk assessment showed that the consumption of wheat and bread posed no significant risk to both adults and children, except for a potential risk of non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic disease for children.
The aim of This study was to assess the concentration of potential toxic elements (PTEs) in wheat, flour of Sangak, and Lavash bread samples and the possible effect of the milling process due to a depreciation of the device. Levels of PTEs in tested samples (n 1/4 270) from 10 factories in Iran were determined by ICP-OES (inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry). In addition, the associated human health risk due to consumption of wheat, Sangak and Lavash bread flours in adults and children was estimated. In this approach, percentile 95% hazard quotient (HQ), Hazard index (HI), and Total Hazard Index (THI) was used as a symptom for endangering the consumer people health. A significant difference was detected in Ni concentration between wheat and two brands of flours i.e., Sangak and Lavash samples. The PTEs concentration order in the wheat and flour samples was Fe > Zn > Cu > Ni > Cr > Pb > As > Cd, respectively. Consistent with findings, the concentration of PTEs in all samples was less than the permitted limit set by the European Commission and JECFA committee. The noncarcinogenic and carcinogenic human health risk assessment (HRA) was calculated. Bread consumption per capita is 0.45 kg for adults and 0.27 kg for children per day. The results showed that both adults and children groups are not at remarkable health risk for PTEs at mean HQ, HI, THI <1 and ELCR <10E-4, but for HRA at the percentile 95% showed there is HRA of non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic disease for children group (HQ, HI, THI >1 and ELCR >10E-4).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available