Revisão Revisado por pares

Environmental Chemicals: From the Environment to Food, to Breast Milk, to the Infant

2007; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 10; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/10937400701389891

ISSN

1521-6950

Autores

R. Y. Wang, Larry L. Needham,

Tópico(s)

Chemical Analysis and Environmental Impact

Resumo

Food is a source of exposure to many environmental chemicals found in human milk and other biological specimens. Ingestion of foods containing high amounts of animal fat is the main route of human exposure to lipophilic chemicals, such as persistent organic pollutants, which tend to bioaccumulate in the lipid compartment. Bioaccumulation results in increased exposure of these chemicals for humans, but particularly to breastfeeding infants, who are at the top of the food chain. The extent to which food contributes to a person's overall exposure depends on individual dietary habits and the concentrations of chemical residues in the food. These, in turn, are affected by (1) application methods, (2) properties and amounts of the chemical, and (3) preparation, handling, and the properties of the food. Once the food is ingested by the lactating woman, the chemical's pharmacokinetics and the transport mechanisms producing the movement of solutes across mammary alveolar cells determine the passage of chemicals from the blood to the milk. Thus, several factors affect the presence in human milk of environmental chemicals from dietary sources.

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