Literature DB >> 17092619

Seafood arsenic: implications for human risk assessment.

Jonathan Borak1, H Dean Hosgood.   

Abstract

Concerns about the adverse effects of chronic arsenic exposure have focused on contaminated drinking water and airborne workplace exposures; the risks of naturally occurring arsenic in foods have received less attention. About 90% of the arsenic in US diets comes from seafood, of which only a small proportion occurs in inorganic forms; the great majority consists of complex organic compounds that generally have been regarded as non-toxic. However, recent studies of seafood have documented formation of metabolites carcinogenic in some rodents. To calculate the risks of ingested seafood arsenic, therefore, it is necessary to identify the nature and quantity of arsenic species present and the metabolites formed by expected metabolic activities. We review the nature and quantities of the various arsenical compounds found in dietary seafood and discuss their metabolic processing and fate. Based on conservative dose estimates and the likelihood that arsenic's carcinogenic mechanisms follow sub-linear dose-response curves, we estimate a margin of exposure of at least 10(3)-10(4) between carcinogenic doses used in rodent studies and those expected after human consumption of large quantities of seafood.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17092619     DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2006.09.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Regul Toxicol Pharmacol        ISSN: 0273-2300            Impact factor:   3.271


  29 in total

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