0000000000666420
AUTHOR
Laurence Dahbi
Reliable bioassays to detect potential hazard of paperboard food contact material extracts
Food contact materials (FCM) represent a major economic issue and a large field of innovation. Food packaging production must be in compliance with the European Regulation 1935/2004: the third article specifies that FCM must not transfer their constituents to food in quantities which could endanger human health under normal or foreseeable conditions of use. Indeed, these materials are not inert and, in addition to started substances, Non-Intentionally Added Substances (NIAS) are able to be released into the food. NIAS can be contaminants from recycled materials, impurities, synthetic residues, new substances formed along the packaging production chain… Then, NIAS could represent a larget pa…
Lemon Juice, Sesame Paste, and Autoclaving Influence Iron Bioavailability of Hummus: Assessment by an In Vitro Digestion/Caco-2 Cell Model
Hummus, an iron-containing plant-based dish mainly made from chickpea puré
The consequences of physical post-treatments (microwave and electron-beam) on food/packaging interactions: A physicochemical and toxicological approach
IF 4.052; The safety of microwave and electron-beam treatments has been demonstrated, in regards to the formation of reaction products that could endanger human health. An integrated approach was used combining the potential toxicity of all the substances likely to migrate to their chemical characterizations. This approach was applied to polypropylene (PP) films prepared with a selection of additives. Components were identified by liquid and gas chromatography using a mass selective detector system. Their potential toxicity was assessed using three in vitro short-term bioassays and their migrations were carried out using a standards-based approach. After the electron-beam treatment some add…