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Critical Evaluation of Analytical Methods for the Determination of Anthropogenic Organic Contaminants in Edible Oils: An Overview of the Last Five Years

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 53, Issue 8, Pages 1733-1747

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10408347.2022.2040352

Keywords

Determination; edible oils; LLE; MCPDs; PAHs; pesticides

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This paper discusses the methods for controlling anthropogenic contaminants in edible oils, including sample preparation, analysis, and regulations. Liquid-liquid extraction and QuEChERS methods are commonly used for extraction and analysis, with mass spectrometry being the most commonly used analyzer. The results show that a portion of the analyzed samples exceed the legal limits for pesticides, MCPDs, and PAHs.
Anthropogenic contaminants, as pesticides, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and monochloropropanediols (MCPDs), have become important to be controlled in edible oils, since their regular occurrence. In fact, alerts from the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) in oils normally include these compounds. From a critical point of view, tools used to control these compounds in the last 5 years will be discussed, including sample preparation, analysis and current regulations. Extraction and analysis methods will be discussed next, being liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) and QuEChERS, with or without clean-up step, as well as chromatographic methods coupled to different analyzers (mainly mass spectrometry), the most commonly used for extraction and analysis respectively. Occurrence in samples will also be reviewed and compared with the legal maximum residue limits (MRLs), observing that 4%, 20% and 60% of the analyzed samples exceed the legal limits for pesticides, MCPDs and PAHs respectively.

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