| Literature DB >> 31216097 |
Benjamin Sachse1, Anna Elena Kolbaum2, Rainer Ziegenhagen1, Susanne Andres1, Katharina Berg2, Birgit Dusemund1, Karen Ildico Hirsch-Ernst1, Oliver Kappenstein3, Frederic Müller3, Claudia Röhl1,4, Oliver Lindtner2, Alfonso Lampen1, Bernd Schäfer1.
Abstract
Manganese is both an essential nutrient and a potential neurotoxicant. Therefore, the question arises whether the dietary manganese intake in the German population is on the low or high side. Results from a pilot total diet study in Germany presented here reveal that the average dietary manganese intake in the general population in Germany aged 14-80 years is about 2.8 mg day-1 for a person of 70 kg body weight. This exposure level is within the intake range of 2-5 mg per person and day as recommended by the societies for nutrition in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. No information on the dietary exposure of children in Germany can be provided so far. Although reliable information on health effects related to oral manganese exposure is limited, there is no indication from the literature that these dietary intake levels are associated with adverse health effects either by manganese deficiency or excess. However, there is limited evidence that manganese taken up as a highly bioavailable bolus, for example, uptake via drinking water or food supplements, could pose a potential risk to human health-particularly in certain subpopulations-when certain intake amounts, which are currently not well defined, are exceeded.Entities:
Keywords: TDS-Exposure; food supplements; manganese; risk assessment; total diet studyzzm321990
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31216097 DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.201900065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Nutr Food Res ISSN: 1613-4125 Impact factor: 5.914