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POLYCHLORODIBENZODIOXINS (PCDDs), POLYCHLORODIBENZO-FURANS (PCDFs), AND DIOXIN-LIKE POLYCHLOROBIPHENYLS (DL-PCBs) IN MILK, MOZZARELLA CHEESE, WHEY, AND WHEY CHEESE FROM BUFFALOES RAISED IN THE CAMPANIA REGION
Author(s) -
Maria Luisa Cortesi,
Claudia Chirollo,
Aniello Anastasio,
Paolo Sarnelli,
Stefania Paola De Filippis,
Alessandro Di Domenico
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
italian journal of food safety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.359
H-Index - 13
ISSN - 2239-7132
DOI - 10.4081/ijfs.2012.3.29
Subject(s) - contamination , food science , pollutant , food contaminant , chemistry , tolerable daily intake , environmental chemistry , polychlorinated dibenzofurans , mozzarella cheese , persistent organic pollutant , sheep milk , food chain , population , toxic equivalency factor , biology , body weight , ecology , environmental health , medicine , organic chemistry , endocrinology
Dioxins (PCDDs and PCDFs) and PCBs are a group of and toxic organo-chlorinated chemicals comprising hundreds of structurally related compounds (congeners) classified as persistent organic pollutants (POPs). It is acknowledged that 17 PCDD and PCDF congeners are of major concern due to their toxicity; 12 PCB congeners are also recognized to express dioxin-like toxicity and are thereby identified as DL-PCBs. Due to their high persistence and lipophilic nature, dioxins and PCBs tend to accumulate in fat and their bio-accumulation through the food chain may pose the risk of causing adverse effects to human health. For the general population, dietary intake is the most important pathway of exposure to the aforesaid environmental contaminants: meat, milk and dairy products, and fish and other seafood products contribute to total daily intake for more than 90 %. To prevent excessive human exposure to dioxins and DL-PCBs, the European Commission established maximum levels for dioxins and the sum of dioxins and DL-PCBs in an array of food components mainly of animal origin (Regulation EC 1881/2006). In this study, dioxins and DL-PCB concentrations were measured in buffalo milk collected from three impounded Campania farms producing milk with different contamination levels. The fate of contaminants in mozzarella cheese, whey, and whey cheese was also investigated. Analyses were carried out by HRGC-HRMS using US EPA Method 1613. The results of this study show the carry-over of the contamination from milk to its dairy products

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