3.8 Article

Cadmium, lead, and mercury in two commercial squid species from the north Adriatic Sea (central Mediterranean): contamination levels and health risk assessment

Journal

ITALIAN JOURNAL OF FOOD SAFETY
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PAGEPRESS PUBL
DOI: 10.4081/ijfs.2023.11037

Keywords

cephalopods; food safety; heavy metals; human exposure

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Lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and total mercury (Hg) concentrations in European and flying squids from the northern Adriatic Sea were analyzed. The study assessed the risk of the Italian population being exposed to these hazardous metals through consumption. Flying squids had significantly higher Hg and Cd concentrations compared to European squids, with some samples exceeding the maximum limits set by legislation. Consumption of flying squids, especially by children, was associated with elevated intake of these harmful metals, raising concerns about potential neurotoxicity.
In this study, lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and total mercury (Hg) concentrations in European squids (Loligo vulgaris) and flying squids (Todarodes sagittatus) from the northern Adriatic Sea (Italy) were analyzed. The risk of the Italian population being exposed to potentially hazardous metal concentrations through the consumption of these products was also assessed. Compared to European squids, flying squids showed three times higher total Hg concentrations and one hundred times higher Cd concentrations to the point that more than 6 and 25% of the samples exceeded the maximum Hg and Cd limits established by the current legislation. From the evaluation of dietary exposure levels, it emerged that the consumption of flying squids was associated with the highest Pb intake by children and, consequently, with the lower margin of exposure values in relation to the risk of neurotoxicity (margin of exposure=33). Consumption of flying squids, especially by children, was also associated with higher intakes of Cd, inorganic, and methyl-Hg, which, respectively, accounted for 156, 113, and 23% of the tolerable weekly intakes established for these contaminants at European level. The obtained results raise concern and it may be necessary to provide specific dietary advice on the moderate dietary consumption of some cephalopod species, especially to the youngest and most vulnerable segment of the population. However, besides the highly conservative deterministic method adopted in this study, a refined consumer exposure assessment should be performed through the probabilistic methodology, which is more suitable to represent the real exposure scenario.

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