1. Occurrence and Human-Health Impacts of Mycotoxins in Somalia.
- Author
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Wielogorska E, Mooney M, Eskola M, Ezekiel CN, Stranska M, Krska R, and Elliott C
- Subjects
- Aflatoxin B1 analysis, Fumonisins administration & dosage, Fumonisins analysis, Humans, Liver Neoplasms chemically induced, Maximum Allowable Concentration, Risk Factors, Somalia, Sorghum chemistry, Triticum chemistry, Zea mays chemistry, Food Contamination analysis, Mycotoxins analysis, Mycotoxins toxicity
- Abstract
Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites produced by various molds that contaminate many staple foods and cause a broad range of detrimental health effects in animals and humans through chronic exposure or acute toxicity. As such, the worldwide contamination of food and feed with mycotoxins is a significant problem, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. In this study, mycotoxin occurrence in staple foods consumed in Somalia was determined. A total of 140 samples (42 maize, 40 sorghum, and 58 wheat) were collected from a number of markets in Mogadishu, Somalia, and analyzed by a UPLC-MS/MS multimycotoxin method that could detect 77 toxins. All of the maize samples tested contained eight or more mycotoxins, with aflatoxin B
1 (AFB1 ) and fumonisin B1 (FB1 ) levels reaching up to 908 and 17 322 μg/kg, respectively, greatly exceeding the European Union limits and guidance values. The average probable daily intake of fumonisins (FB1 and FB2 ) was 16.70 μg per kilogram of body weight (kg bw) per day, representing 835% of the recommended provisional maximum tolerable daily intake value of 2 μg/(kg bw)/day. A risk characterization revealed a mean national margin of exposure of 0.62 for AFB1 with an associated risk of developing primary liver cancer estimated at 75 cancers per year per 100 000 people for white-maize consumption alone. The results clearly indicate that aflatoxin and fumonisin exposure is a major public-health concern and that risk-management actions require prioritization in Somalia.- Published
- 2019
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