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izvor podataka: crosbi

Migration of BPA from Food Packaging and Household Products on the Croatian Market (CROSBI ID 323536)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Krivohlavek, Adela ; Mikulec, Nataša ; Budeč, Maja ; Barušić, Lidija ; Bošnir, Jasna ; Šikić, Sandra ; Jakaša, Ivone ; Begović, Tajana ; Janda, Rea ; Vitale Ksenija Migration of BPA from Food Packaging and Household Products on the Croatian Market // International journal of environmental research and public health, 20 (2023), 4; 2877, 11. doi: doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20042877

Podaci o odgovornosti

Krivohlavek, Adela ; Mikulec, Nataša ; Budeč, Maja ; Barušić, Lidija ; Bošnir, Jasna ; Šikić, Sandra ; Jakaša, Ivone ; Begović, Tajana ; Janda, Rea ; Vitale Ksenija

engleski

Migration of BPA from Food Packaging and Household Products on the Croatian Market

Abstract: BPA is a plasticizer for production of polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins, widely used in production of household goods including food packaging. Free BPA is known to migrate from packaging to food, and its uptake has been associated with adverse health effect, particu- larly disruption of endocrine activity. Presence and migration of BPA from plastic consumer products are subject to the strict regulation in the EU. The aim of this study is to analyse migra- tion of BPA from different packaging items and household products sold on Croatian market. To simulate real life exposure, we treated samples with food simulant. The analytical performance confirmed with EU requirements. The results showed BPA levels were assessed in 61 samples by HPLC-FLD and the LOQ of the method was 0.005 mg kg−1 for food simulant that levels of BPA migrated to food simulant were below LOQ and in accordance with specific migration limit into the food which is defined at 0.05 mg kg−1 for all samples. None of analysed products presented health hazard. However, these regulations do not refer to products intended for children use, in which BPA is banned. Further-more, regulations require testing before putting products on the market, while previous research show possible BPA migration that occurs due to various use re-gimes, along with cumulative effect of exposure to even very small concentrations. Therefore, for accurate BPA consumer exposure evaluation and possible health risks, a comprehensive ap-proach is needed.

BPA ; household products ; food packaging ; health ; Croatia

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Podaci o izdanju

20 (4)

2023.

2877

11

objavljeno

1661-7827

1660-4601

doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20042877

Trošak objave rada u otvorenom pristupu

APC

Povezanost rada

Biotehnologija u biomedicini (prirodno područje, biomedicina i zdravstvo, biotehničko područje)

Poveznice
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