| Literature DB >> 26904662 |
Vânia Paula Salviano Dos Santos1, Andréa Medeiros Salgado1, Alexandre Guedes Torres2, Karen Signori Pereira3.
Abstract
This paper presents a literature review on benzene in foods, including toxicological aspects, occurrence, formation mechanisms, and mitigation measures and analyzes data reporting benzene levels in foods. Benzene is recognized by the IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer) as carcinogenic to humans, and its presence in foods has been attributed to various potential sources: packaging, storage environment, contaminated drinking water, cooking processes, irradiation processes, and degradation of food preservatives such as benzoates. Since there are no specific limits for benzene levels in beverages and food in general studies have adopted references for drinking water in a range from 1-10 ppb. The presence of benzene has been reported in various food/beverage substances with soft drinks often reported in the literature. Although the analyses reported low levels of benzene in most of the samples studied, some exceeded permissible limits. The available data on dietary exposure to benzene is minimal from the viewpoint of public health. Often benzene levels were low as to be considered negligible and not a consumer health risk, but there is still a need of more studies for a better understanding of their effects on human health through the ingestion of contaminated food.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26904662 PMCID: PMC4745501 DOI: 10.1155/2015/545640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Food Sci ISSN: 2314-5765
Determination of benzene in foods.
| Food | Benzene concentration | Country | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Organ meats | 18 ppb | United Kingdom | [ |
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| Fruits, cheese, eggs, others | <1 ppb | USA | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages (118 samples) | 1.1–3.67 ppb | Italy | [ |
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| Human milk (23 samples) | 0.01–0.018 ppm | Italy | [ |
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| Nonalcoholic and alcoholic beverages | 47 samples <1 ppb | Canada | [ |
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| Nonalcoholic and alcoholic beverages | 0.02–18 ppb in the 93 positive products | Canada | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages (124 samples) | 4 samples >5 ppb | Canada | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages (134 samples) | Not detected in 33% of the samples | Belgium | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages | 77% samples <1 ppb | USA | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages (63 samples) | 97% of the samples <10 ppb | Ireland | [ |
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| Carrot juice | 0.17–2.01 ppb | Germany | [ |
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| Alcoholic beverages (3 samples) | 2.4 ppb in one sample | China | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages | 0.15–2.36 ppb | Italy | [ |
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| Carbonated soda beverages | <1.5 ppb (25°C) | Egypt | [ |
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| Nonalcoholic beverages (48 samples) | 27.08% samples 5.47–16.91 ppb (where 8.33% samples >10 ppb) | Thailand | [ |