SOME RICE BASED FOOD FOR PEOPLE WITH CELIAC DISEASE CONTAIN RELEVANT AMOUNT OF ARSENIC
Rice is one of the few
cereal grains consumed by people with celiac disease, as it does not contain
gluten. However, it can have high concentrations of a toxic substance --
arsenic -- as revealed by the analyses of flour, cakes, bread, pasta and other
foods made with rice, conducted by researchers from the Miguel Hernández
University of Elche, Spain. The European Union is working to establish the
maximum quantities of arsenic in these products.
Celiac disease affects almost 1% of
the population of the western world, a group which cannot tolerate gluten and
is thus obliged to consume products without it, such as rice. But this grain,
depending on its origin, can also contain worrying levels of arsenic, a toxic
and carcinogenic substance.
For the majority of consumers this
does not pose any problem because they do not eat much rice every day, but this
is not the case for celiac disease sufferers. Researchers from the Miguel
Hernández University of Elche (UMH) have analysed the presence of arsenic in
flour, bread, sweets, pastas, beers and milk made with rice and intended for
this particular group of the population.
The results of the analyses,
presented in the journal 'Food Additives & Contaminants', warn that some of
these products contain "important contents" of total arsenic (As-t,
up to 120 µg/kg) and inorganic arsenic (As-i, up to 85.8 µg/kg). Total arsenic
is the sum of the organic arsenic, which is combined with carbon, and inorganic
arsenic, which reacts with other elements such as oxygen, chlorine and sulphur,
and is more harmful.
With these figures the As-t and As-i
contents only of rice used as a main ingredient -- leaving aside the other
components of the food products -- were estimated and were found to be as high
as 235 and 198 µg/kg, respectively..
Moreover, the daily intake of
inorganic arsenic by celiac disease sufferers -- a consequence of their
consumption of rice products -- was calculated as between 0.45 and 0.46 µg/kg
(micrograms per kilogram of body weight) for women and men weighing 58 and 75
kg respectively. And, in the case of children (up to the age of five), these
figures are even higher, ranging between 0.61 and 0.78 µg/kg, according to
another study published in the 'Journal of Food Science'.
A panel of experts from the European
Food Safety Authority (EFSA) of the EU established in 2009 that there is
evidence to suggest that an intake range of 0.3 -- 8.0 µg/kg of body weight per
day entails a risk of developing lung, skin or bladder cancer. The estimated
intakes in the two studies therefore vary within this range.
As Ángel Carbonell, co-author of the
studies, explains: "These figures show that we cannot exclude a risk to
the health of people who consume these kinds of products," although he
recognises an important point: "The European Union has not yet established
legal limits for the maximum content of arsenic in rice and rice-based foods,
though it is currently working on this."
Lack of legislation
The researchers' recommendation is
clear: "What is needed is for health agencies to legislate to limit the
levels of arsenic that cannot be exceeded in rice-based foods intended for
consumers who suffer from celiac disease." Until now, celiac disease was
diagnosed predominantly in children, but in recent years the profile has
changed and one in every five people with the disease is over 65 years old.
Currently, every EU country is
taking samples of these products, analysing them and conveying the results to
the EFSA to draw up a database broad enough to be able to make decisions. The
Spanish Agency for Consumer Affairs, Food Safety and Nutrition (AECOSAN) has
recently sent the Spanish report, put together in collaboration with the
researchers responsible for this study..
Another important recommendation
they make is to include quality information on labels: "The inorganic
arsenic content in every food product should be indicated, and the variety of
rice used and its provenance should be identified clearly, because some are
more recommended than others," affirms Sandra Munera, one of the authors.
Arsenic is naturally present in
Earth's crust, but in some regions its abundance is greater than in others, and
its concentration also increases with the use of pesticides. The substance then
spreads through water to rice, one of the few plants that is cultivated when
flooded.
One of the 'cleanest' types of rice
is from the Doñana National Park, as the use of pesticides has not been
permitted here and arsenic is not naturally present in large quantities. On the
other hand, in countries like India and Bangladesh, where waters are
contaminated with inorganic arsenic and rice constitutes a staple food for the
population, the result is currently one of the largest mass poisonings in
history.
Comments
Post a Comment