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Toxin in your oat breakfast?

Updated on: 26 February,2015 03:04 PM IST  | 
Agencies |

Often touted for boosting cardiac health, oat-based breakfast cereals have now come under the scanner as researchers have detected in them potentially dangerous mould contamination

Toxin in your oat breakfast?

Oatmeal

Washington: Often touted for boosting cardiac health, oat-based breakfast cereals have now come under the scanner as researchers have detected in them potentially dangerous mould contamination.


Some oat-based breakfast cereals contain a high-level of mould-related toxin called ochratoxin A (OTA) that has been linked to kidney cancer in animal studies, the researchers, who procured the samples from the US, reported.


 Oatmeal
Representational picture


"OTA has been found in all major cereal grains including oat, wheat, and barley worldwide and considered as a potential concern in food safety," said researchers Hyun Jung Lee and Dojin Ryu from the University of Idaho in the US.

However, the incidence of OTA was highest in oat-based breakfast cereals, followed by wheat-based, corn-based, and rice-based breakfast cereals, the findings showed.

Scientists do not yet know how the toxin affects human health, but the International Agency for Research on Cancer, which is part of the World Health Organisation, classifies it as a possible human carcinogen.

Animals exposed to OTA in experiments developed kidney tumours.

Although the US does not currently regulate the contaminant, the European Union has set maximum limits for OTA in food (three nanogram/g).

Ryu and Lee wanted to see how the US breakfast cereals measured up to that standard.

The researchers tested close to 500 samples of corn-, rice-, wheat- and oat-based breakfast cereals purchased from the US stores over two years.

They found that in most samples, OTA levels were lower than the European threshold.

But concentrations exceeded the EU standard in eight percent of oat-based breakfast cereal samples.

The researchers concluded that oat production, storage and processing need careful review to better protect consumer health.

The findings were reported in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

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