4.7 Article

Occurrence of type A trichothecenes in conventionally and organically produced oats and oat products

Journal

MOLECULAR NUTRITION & FOOD RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 12, Pages 1547-1553

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.200700146

Keywords

mycotoxin; organic farming; T-2 tetraol; T-2 toxin; trichothecenes

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Among cereals, oats are known to be very frequently contaminated with type A trichothecenes and so they can play a major role in the exposition of the consumer to these mycotoxins. Seventy representative oat samples of both conventional and organic production were drawn at mills and at wholesale stage according to Commissions Regulation (EC No 401/2006 and analyzed for nine type A trichothecenes by LC-MS/MS. High contamination rates were found for most of the toxins in conventional as well as in organic products (e.g. 100% for T-2 toxin or 99% for HT-2 toxin). The nican concentration of T-2/HT-2 (sum of the toxins) was 17 18 Vg/kg (mean SD) in all samples, 27 21 mu g/kg in conventional, and 7.6 +/- 4.6 mu g/kg in organic products, respectively. The highest T-2/HT-2 level has been determined in conventionally produced oat flakes (85 mu g/kg). The mean level of T-2 tetraol (9.5 +/- 7.7 mu g/kg) in all samples was found to be even higher than that of T-2 (5.1 +/- 6.0 mu g/kg), whereas levels of T-2 triol, 4,15-diacetoxyscirpenol, 15-monoacetoxyscirpenol, and neosolaniol were considerably lower. For oats and oat products from organic farming contamination levels of T-2, HT-2, T-2 triol, T-2 tetraol, and neosolaniol were significantly lower. The results are discussed with respect to possible health risks for the consumer.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available