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TITLE:
Preliminary assessment of galaxolide bioaccessibility in raw and cooked fish - imarina:5132365

URV's Author/s:Borrull Ballarín, Francesc / Castro Serrano, Óscar / Nadal Lomas, Martí / Pocurull Aixala, Eva / TRABALÓN ESCODA, LAURA
Author, as appears in the article.:Trabalon, Laura; Alves, Ricardo N; Castro, Oscar; Nadal, Marti; Borrull, Francesc; Pocurull, Eva; Marques, Antonio
Author's mail:oscar.castro@estudiants.urv.cat
oscar.castro@estudiants.urv.cat
marti.nadal@urv.cat
eva.pocurull@urv.cat
francesc.borrull@urv.cat
Author identifier:0000-0002-0217-4827
0000-0001-5123-995X
0000-0003-2718-9336
Journal publication year:2018
Publication Type:Journal Publications
ISSN:02786915
APA:Trabalon, Laura; Alves, Ricardo N; Castro, Oscar; Nadal, Marti; Borrull, Francesc; Pocurull, Eva; Marques, Antonio (2018). Preliminary assessment of galaxolide bioaccessibility in raw and cooked fish. Food And Chemical Toxicology, 122(), 33-37. DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2018.09.075
Paper original source:Food And Chemical Toxicology. 122 33-37
Abstract:Generally, dietary intake assessment and risk characterization are evaluated using contaminant concentration in raw fish while it is usually ingested cooked, which can cause an overestimation because one of the essential issues for risk-benefit analysis is to determine the maximum amount of a contaminant that can be released from the food matrix and be absorbed by the human body, called bioaccessibility. Moreover, despite most seafood products are cooked before consumption, risk assessment is still evaluated in raw products, strongly affecting public health guidelines. In the present study, an in vitro bioaccessibility assay was performed for Galaxolide (HHCB) in fish samples. Raw spiked hake samples were in vitro digested and aliquots of each fraction of the digestion process were analysed. HHCB was quantitatively present in the bioaccessibility fraction. The effect of fish cooking on HHCB was also evaluated in cod and mackerel samples. Results demonstrate that steaming and grilling processes lead to a loss of 50-70% HHCB in fish.
Article's DOI:10.1016/j.fct.2018.09.075
Link to the original source:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278691518307191?via%3Dihub
Paper version:info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
licence for use:https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
Department:Química Analítica i Química Orgànica
Ciències Mèdiques Bàsiques
Licence document URL:https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Thematic Areas:Toxicology
Saúde coletiva
Química
Odontología
Nutrição
Medicine (miscellaneous)
Medicina veterinaria
Medicina iii
Medicina ii
Medicina i
Materiais
Interdisciplinar
Food science & technology
Food science
Farmacia
Ensino
Engenharias iv
Engenharias ii
Enfermagem
Educação física
Ciências biológicas iii
Ciências biológicas ii
Ciências biológicas i
Ciências ambientais
Ciências agrárias i
Ciência de alimentos
Biotecnología
Biodiversidade
Astronomia / física
Keywords:Water pollutants, chemical
Tandem mass spectrometry
Steaming
Solid phase microextraction
Seafood
Risk assessment
Reproducibility of results
Intestinal mucosa
In vitro techniques
Humans
Grilling
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
Galaxolide
Food contamination
Fishes
Fish
Digestion
Dietary exposure
Cooking
Biological availability
Bioaccessibility
Benzopyrans
Animals
grilling
galaxolide
fish
bioaccessibility
Entity:Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Record's date:2025-01-28
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