Author/Authors :
Normandin، نويسنده , , Louise and Bouchard، نويسنده , , Michèle and Ayotte، نويسنده , , Pierre and Blanchet، نويسنده , , Carole and Becalski، نويسنده , , Adam and Bonvalot، نويسنده , , Yvette and Phaneuf، نويسنده , , Denise and Lapointe، نويسنده , , Caroline and Gagné، نويسنده , , Michelle and Courteau، نويسنده , , Marilène، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The distribution of acrylamide in food items frequently consumed by Canadian adolescents was determined along with estimates of their contribution to the overall dietary intake of acrylamide. A total of 196 non-smoking adolescents (10–17 years old) were recruited in Montreal Island population, Canada. Participants were invited to fill out a 2-day food diary and a food frequency questionnaire over the last month. 146 samples of foods most frequently consumed by participants were analyzed for acrylamide contents. The highest acrylamide contents were measured in deep-fried french fries and potato chips (mean ± SD: 1053 ± 657 and 524 ± 276 ng/g respectively). On the basis of the 2-day food diary, median total daily intake of acrylamide was estimated at 0.29 μg/kg bw/d, as compared to 0.17 μg/kg bw/d on the basis of the food frequency questionnaire. These values are similar to those reported in comparable populations. Deep-fried french fries consumption contributed the most to daily acrylamide intake (50%) followed by potato chips (10%), oven-baked french fries (8%) and breakfast cereals (8%). Margins of exposure based on genotoxic benchmark dose limits were estimated to be low (≈<100) in high-consumer adolescents, indicating the need to continue efforts to reduce dietary acrylamide exposure.
Keywords :
dietary survey , Acrylamide , Dietary intake , Adolescents , Food analysis , Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry