| Literature DB >> 28822773 |
Luc Ingenbleek1, Eric Jazet2, Anaclet D Dzossa3, Samson B Adebayo4, Julius Ogungbangbe5, Sylvestre Dansou6, Zima J Diallo7, Christiant Kouebou8, Abimbola Adegboye9, Epiphane Hossou10, Salimata Coulibaly11, Sara Eyangoh12, Bruno Le Bizec13, Philippe Verger14, Jean Kamanzi15, Caroline Merten16, Jean-Charles Leblanc17.
Abstract
The core food model was described more than three decades ago, and has been used ever since to identify main food contributors to dietary intakes for both nutrients and other food chemicals. The Sub-Saharan Africa Total Diet Study (SSA-TDS) uses this model to describe the food consumption habits of some selected populations of Benin, Cameroon, Mali, and Nigeria, prior to use in the completion of quantitative risk assessments with regard to food chemicals. Food consumption data were derived from food expenditure data contained in national household budget surveys that were provided by the national institutes of statistics in each country. A classification of African foods was established for the purpose of the study and core foods were selected, so as to reflect 96 ± 1% of the average national total diet expressed in weight. Populations from eight study centers were selected by national stakeholders. This approach involves the purchase of 4020 individual foods, prepared as consumed and pooled into 335 food composite samples, for analysis of mycotoxins, PAHs, PCBs and dioxins, pesticides, metals and trace elements, PFAs, and BFRs. This sampling plan aims to provide a representative, cost effective, and replicable approach for deterministic dietary exposure assessments in developing countries.Entities:
Keywords: Core food; Dietary exposure assessment; Sampling plan; Total diet study
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28822773 DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2017.08.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem Toxicol ISSN: 0278-6915 Impact factor: 6.023