4.2 Article

In vivo study of subacute oral toxicity of kelulut honey

Journal

INTERNATIONAL FOOD RESEARCH JOURNAL
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 1188-1204

Publisher

UNIV PUTRA MALAYSIA PRESS
DOI: 10.47836/ifrj.29.5.20

Keywords

subacute oral toxicity; kelulut honey; stingless bee honey; honey biomarker; in vivo study

Funding

  1. [K -FR -175]
  2. [53263]

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This study evaluated the effects of daily consumption of kelulut honey on health through animal experiments. The results showed that daily consumption of kelulut honey had no toxicity and had beneficial effects on food intake, weight gain, and immune function. Kelulut honey can be safely consumed at a high dose.
Kelulut honey or also known as stingless bee honey is favoured for its tremendous nutritional benefits. However, the lack of systematic safety studies leads to it having no quality control or safety guarantee for the consumers. Consequently, the present work was designed to assess the effect of daily kelulut honey consumption. Subacute oral toxicity study was conducted following the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) test guideline 407. Sprague Dawley rats were administered with kelulut honey at the concentrations of 500, 1,000, and 2,000 mg/kg for four weeks, and observed for any changes or toxicity signs following daily consumption. The rats were physically and biochemically analysed, and the serum of highest honey concentration (2,000 mg/kg) consumption underwent metabolite analysis. Histopathology observations on the kidney and liver were also performed. The highest concentration of kelulut honey did not show any mortality or toxicity. Overall, there were no significant differences in all parameters, physically and biochemically, as compared to the control (distilled water), thus indicating the absence of toxicity of kelulut honey daily consumption. It was found that kelulut honey consumption demonstrated generally good health effects, such as in controlling food intake, weight gain, and increasing immune function. The honey's lethal medium dose surpassed 2,000 mg/kg, thus classified in category 5 according to the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals, which means that it is safe to consume at a high dose.

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