1. Chlorinated paraffins in takeout food and its packaging in Beijing, China and dietary exposure risk.
- Author
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Wu, Xingyi, Zhang, Su, Cao, Jun, Tian, Jiangxin, Zhou, Wenfeng, Gao, Haixiang, and Dong, Shujun
- Subjects
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FOOD packaging , *CHLORINATED paraffin , *RISK exposure , *ALUMINUM foil , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD of animal origin - Abstract
Chlorinated paraffins (CPs) are hazardous to humans, and dietary intake acts as the primary pathway for human exposure to CPs. Takeout food is popular worldwide, but the presence of CPs in takeout food and its packaging is unclear. In this study, the concentrations and distributions of short- and median-chain CPs (SCCPs and MCCPs, respectively) were measured in 97 samples of four categories of takeout food and 33 samples of three types of takeout packaging. The SCCP and MCCP median concentrations for the takeout food samples were 248 and 339, 77.2 and 98.2, 118 and 258, 42.9 and 64.4 ng/g wet weight in meat, starch, half meat/half starch, and vegetables, respectively. Takeout food contained higher concentrations of SCCPs than MCCPs. The dominant SCCP and MCCP congener groups in takeout food were C 10 Cl 6–7 and C 14 Cl 7–8 , respectively. The CP concentrations in takeout food were lower than those in packaging. The SCCP and MCCP median concentrations, respectively, in packaging were 9750 and 245 ng/g in polypropylene, 2830 and 135 ng/g in paper, and 2060 and 119 ng/g in aluminum foil. The concentrations of SCCPs and MCCPs were comparable in aluminum foil, whereas the concentrations of SCCPs were higher than those of MCCPs in polypropylene and paper. Correlations between CP concentrations in the takeout food and packaging indicated that CPs in packaging were potentially an important source of CPs in the takeout food. A dietary exposure risk assessment showed the takeout food posed a low risk for human exposure to CPs; however, high-frequency consumption may pose a health risk. This study clarified the current contamination situation in takeout food in Beijing, China. The resulting data could be used to prevent human exposure to CPs through dietary intake and to facilitate the market's control over the quality of takeout food. • Chlorinated paraffin (CP) concentrations are highest in animal-origin takeout food. • CP concentrations are highest in polypropylene and lowest in aluminum foil. • Shorter carbon chain and lower chlorination CPs are dominant in food and packaging. • CPs in packaging are a potential source for CPs in takeout food. • The human exposure risk to CPs through takeout food intake is low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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