4.7 Article

Elemental Profile in Chicken Egg Components and Associated Human Health Risk Assessment

期刊

TOXICS
卷 11, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics11110900

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egg; metals; health risk; chemometrics

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This study aims to determine the elemental profile in eggs, evaluate the health risk of heavy metal presence, and develop statistical models for differentiating egg components. The results suggest measurable differences among eggs from different husbandry systems, and the analyzed egg samples pose a non-carcinogenic risk within the safe range.
Egg is a food product of high nutritional quality, extensively consumed worldwide. The objectives of this study were the determination of the elemental profile in eggs (egg white, yolk, and eggshell), the estimation of the non-carcinogenic health risk associated with the presence of heavy metals in investigated egg samples, and the development of statistical models to identify the best predictors for the differentiation of egg components. The assessments were carried out in a total set of 210 samples, comprising home-produced and commercial eggs, using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The results suggested measurable differences amongst hen eggs coming from different husbandry systems. The statistical models employed in this study identified several elemental markers that can be used for discriminating between market and local producer samples. The non-carcinogenic risk related to the consumption of the analyzed egg samples was generally in the safe range for the consumers, below the maximum permitted levels set by Romanian and European legislation. Food contamination is a public health problem worldwide, and the risk associated with exposure to trace metals from food products has aroused widespread concern in human health, so assessing the heavy metal content in food products is mandatory to evaluate the health risk.

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