Tejada-Purizaca Teresa R, Garcia-Chevesich Pablo A, Ticona-Quea Juana, Martínez Gisella, Martínez Kattia, Morales-Paredes Lino, Romero-Mariscal Giuliana, Arenazas-Rodríguez Armando, Vanzin Gary, Sharp Jonathan O, McCray John E
Facultad de Ingeniería de Procesos, Universidad Nacional de San Agustín de Arequipa, Arequipa 04001, Peru.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401, USA.
Foods. 2024 Feb 29;13(5):762. doi: 10.3390/foods13050762.
To better query regional sources of metal(loid) exposure in an under-communicated region, available scientific literature from 50 national universities (undergraduate and graduate theses and dissertations), peer-reviewed journals, and reports published in Spanish and English were synthesized with a focus on metal(loid) bioaccumulation in Peruvian food and medicinal products utilized locally. The study considered 16 metal(loid)s that are known to exert toxic impacts on humans (Hg, Al, Sb, As, Ba, Be, Cd, Cr, Sn, Ni, Ag, Pb, Se, Tl, Ti, and U). A total of 1907 individual analyses contained within 231 scientific publications largely conducted by Peruvian universities were analyzed. These analyses encompassed 239 reported species classified into five main food/medicinal groups-plants, fish, macroinvertebrates and mollusks, mammals, and "others" category. Our benchmark for comparison was the World Health Organization (Codex Alimentarius) standards. The organisms most frequently investigated included plants such as asparagus, corn, cacao, and rice; fish varieties like trout, tuna, and catfish; macroinvertebrates and mollusks including crab and shrimp; mammals such as alpaca, cow, chicken eggs, and milk; and other categories represented by propolis, honey, lichen, and edible frog. Bioaccumulation-related research increased from 2 to more than 25 publications per year between 2006 and 2022. The results indicate that Peruvian food and natural medicinal products can have dangerous levels of metal(loid)s, which can cause health problems for consumers. Many common and uncommon food/medicinal products and harmful metals identified in this analysis are not regulated on the WHO's advisory lists, suggesting the urgent need for stronger regulations to ensure public safety. In general, Cd and Pb are the metals that violated WHO standards the most, although commonly non-WHO regulated metals such as Hg, Al, As, Cr, and Ni are also a concern. Metal concentrations found in Peru are on many occasions much higher than what has been reported elsewhere. We conclude that determining the safety of food/medicinal products is challenging due to varying metal concentrations that are influenced not only by metal type but also geographical location. Given the scarcity of research findings in many regions of Peru, urgent attention is required to address this critical knowledge gap and implement effective regulatory measures to protect public health.
为了更好地查询一个信息交流不畅地区金属(类金属)暴露的区域来源,我们综合了50所国立大学(本科和研究生论文)、同行评审期刊以及以西班牙语和英语发表的报告中的现有科学文献,重点关注秘鲁当地使用的食品和药品中的金属(类金属)生物累积情况。该研究考虑了16种已知会对人类产生毒性影响的金属(类金属)(汞、铝、锑、砷、钡、铍、镉、铬、锡、镍、银、铅、硒、铊、钛和铀)。对秘鲁各大学进行的231篇科学出版物中包含的总共1907项个体分析进行了分析。这些分析涵盖了239种报告的物种,分为五个主要食品/药品类别——植物、鱼类、大型无脊椎动物和软体动物、哺乳动物以及“其他”类别。我们的比较基准是世界卫生组织(食品法典)标准。最常被研究的生物包括芦笋、玉米、可可和大米等植物;鳟鱼、金枪鱼和鲶鱼等鱼类品种;包括螃蟹和虾在内的大型无脊椎动物和软体动物;羊驼、牛、鸡蛋和牛奶等哺乳动物;以及以蜂胶、蜂蜜、地衣和食用蛙为代表的其他类别。2006年至2022年间,与生物累积相关的研究从每年2篇增加到超过25篇。结果表明,秘鲁的食品和天然药品可能含有危险水平的金属(类金属),这可能给消费者带来健康问题。本分析中确定的许多常见和不常见的食品/药品以及有害金属未被列入世界卫生组织的咨询清单,这表明迫切需要加强监管以确保公众安全。总体而言,镉和铅是最常违反世界卫生组织标准的金属,不过汞、铝、砷、铬和镍等通常未受世界卫生组织监管的金属也令人担忧。在秘鲁发现的金属浓度在很多情况下远高于其他地方报告的水平。我们得出结论,由于金属浓度不仅受金属类型影响,还受地理位置影响,各不相同,因此确定食品/药品的安全性具有挑战性。鉴于秘鲁许多地区的研究结果匮乏,迫切需要关注以填补这一关键的知识空白,并实施有效的监管措施来保护公众健康。