海鲜中的汞及风险评估

K. Itano
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引用次数: 5

摘要

汞以单质、无机和有机(甲基化)形式存在于环境中。随着甲基汞在海洋食物链上的生物积累,金枪鱼、鲨鱼和旗鱼等大型掠食性物种的组织中含有高浓度的甲基汞。几乎所有海鱼体内的汞都是甲基汞。由于齿鲸和海豚等小型鲸目动物寿命长,处于海洋食物链的顶端,它们的组织中汞含量比大型掠食性鱼类要高。小型鲸目动物将甲基汞去甲基化为无机汞,并以硒化汞的形式储存在肝脏中。海产品是人类食物链中汞的主要来源之一。1972年,粮农组织/世卫组织食品添加剂联合专家委员会(JECFA)确定了一般人群甲基汞的临时每周可耐受摄入量(PTWI)为3.3 μg/kg体重。1973年,日本厚生劳动省将海洋食品中总汞和甲基汞的临时允许含量分别定为0.4和0.3 μg/湿克。这些水平是基于JECFA的PTWI。2003年,JECFA根据在法罗群岛和塞舌尔群岛进行的关于胎儿甲基汞暴露对儿童发育影响的两项队列研究的结果,将孕妇甲基汞的PTWI设定为1.6 μg/kg体重。2005年,日本食品安全委员会宣布,怀孕或可能怀孕的妇女每周甲基汞的可耐受摄入量(TWI)为每公斤体重2.0微克。日本人平均每天从食物中摄入的汞约为TWI的60%。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mercury in Seafood and Assessment of Risk
Mercury is present in the environment in elemental, inorganic and organic (methylated) forms. As methylmercury bioaccumulates up the marine food chain, large predatory species such as tuna, shark and swordfish have high concentrations of methylmercury in their tissue. Almost all of the mercury in marine fish is methylmercury. As small cetaceans such as toothed whale and dolphin are long-lived and occupy the top of the marine food chain, they contain more mercury in their tissue than large predatory fish. Small cetaceans demethylate methylmercury into inorganic mercury and store it in the liver as mercury selenide. Marine seafood is one of the major sources of mercury in the human food chain. The provisional tolerable weekly intake (PTWI) for methylmercury of 3.3 μg/kg-body weight for the general population was established by the Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) in 1972. In 1973, the Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare set the provisional permitted levels of total mercury and methylmercury in marine food at 0.4 and 0.3 μg/wet-g, respectively. These levels were based on the PTWI of JECFA. In 2003, from the outcomes of two cohort studies in the Faroe Islands and Seychelles Islands regarding the effect of fetal methylmercury exposure on children’s development, JECFA set the PTWI of methylmercury at 1.6 μg/kg-body weight for pregnant women. In 2005, the Japanese Food Safety Commission announced a tolerable weekly intake (TWI) for methylmercury of 2.0 μg/kg-body weight for women who are or may be pregnant. The Japanese average daily intake of mercury from foods is about 60% of the TWI.
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