| Literature DB >> 26768246 |
R John Wallace1, Jürgen Gropp2, Noël Dierick3, Lucio G Costa4,5, Giovanna Martelli6, Paul G Brantom7, Vasileios Bampidis8, Derek W Renshaw9, Lubomir Leng10.
Abstract
Increasingly, feed additives for livestock, such as amino acids and vitamins, are being produced by Gram-negative bacteria, particularly Escherichia coli. The potential therefore exists for animals, consumers and workers to be exposed to possibly harmful amounts of endotoxin from these products. The aim of this review was to assess the extent of the risk from endotoxins in feed additives and to calculate how such risk can be assessed from the properties of the additive. Livestock are frequently exposed to a relatively high content of endotoxin in the diet: no additional hazard to livestock would be anticipated if the endotoxin concentration of the feed additive falls in the same range as feedstuffs. Consumer exposure will be unaffected by the consumption of food derived from animals receiving endotoxin-containing feed, because the small concentrations of endotoxin absorbed do not accumulate in edible tissues. In contrast, workers processing a dusty additive may be exposed to hazardous amounts of endotoxin even if the endotoxin concentration of the product is low. A calculation method is proposed to compare the potential risk to the worker, based on the dusting potential, the endotoxin concentration and technical guidance of the European Food Safety Authority, with national exposure limits.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26768246 PMCID: PMC4714429 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-016-0087-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Estimation of user exposure to endotoxins from feed additives, including consideration of using filter mask FF P2 or FF P3 as preventative measure
| Calculation | Identifier | Description | Amount | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | Endotoxin content IU/g product | |||
| b | Dusting potential (g/m3) | |||
| a × b | c | Endotoxin content in the air (IU/m3) | ||
| d | No of premixture batches made/working day | 40 | EFSA Guidance on User Safety [ | |
| e | Time of exposure (s) per production of one batch | 20 | EFSA Guidance on User Safety [ | |
| d × e | f | Total duration of daily exposure/worker (s) | 800 | |
| g | Uncertainty Factor | 2 | EFSA Guidance on User Safety [ | |
| f × g | h | Refined total duration of daily exposure/worker (s) | 1600 | |
| h/3600 | i | Refined total duration of daily exposure (h) | 0.444 | |
| j | Inhaled air (m3) per 8-h working day | 10 | EFSA Guidance on User Safety [ | |
| j/8 × i | k | Inhaled air during exposure (m3) | 0.556 | |
| c × k | l | Endotoxin inhaled (IU) during exposure per 8-h working day | ||
| m | Health based recommended exposure limit of endotoxin (IU/m3) per 8-h working day | 90 | Health Council of the Netherlands [ | |
| m × j | n | Health based recommended exposure limit of total endotoxin exposure (IU) per 8-h working day | 900 | |
| l/10 | Endotoxins inhaled (IU) per 8 h working day reduced by filter mask FF P2 (reduction factor 10) | |||
| l/20 | Endotoxins inhaled (IU) per 8 h working day reduced by filter mask FF P3 (reduction factor 20) |
Endotoxin contamination of feed materials
| Feed material | Average/max concentration (units quoted) | Average/max concentration (IU/mg, calculated)a | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pig feed | 13/60 mg/kg | 260/1200 | Cort et al. [ |
| Hay | 0.05 mg/kg | 1 | Cort et al. [ |
| Pelleted goat feed | 10 mg/kg | 200 | Cort et al. [ |
| Corn silage | 1/200 IU/mg | 1/200 | Dutkiewicz et al. [ |
| Duck feed | 50, 93 IU/mg | 50, 93 | Scharf [ |
| Horse feed oats | >50 ng/mg | >1000 | Wolf et al. [ |
| Pig feed | 7.5-259, mean 64.7, ng/mg | 150-5,180, mean 1294 | Ratzinger [ |
aUsing an activity of 20 IU/ng pure endotoxin, based on values of 12–25 IU/ng estimated by Luchi and Morrison [7] and 10 IU/ng by Liebers et al. [49]