2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2004.11.004
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Human exposure and internal dose assessments of acrylamide in food

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Cited by 343 publications
(245 citation statements)
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“…Increasingly, however, direct and indirect evidence points to adverse effects of industrially processed foods on the pandemic of obesity (Swinburn et al, 2004;Astrup et al, 2008) and of various chronic diseases such as type II diabetes (van Dam et al, 2002), cardiovascular disease (Hu et al, 2000;Fung et al, 2004) and cancer (Kesse et al, 2006;Ambrosini et al, 2008;Campbell et al, 2008;Chajes et al, 2008). Of particular concern are specific features of highly processed foods such as the fact that they are high in energy, fats, sugar and salt and poor in dietary fibre (Astrup et al, 2008), that other compounds may be added or generated during food processing (for example, colourants, additives, acrylamide, trans-fatty acids) (Dybing et al, 2005;Astrup et al, 2008;McCarthy et al, 2008) and that they are usually consumed in large portion sizes (Matthiesen et al, 2003). Trans-fatty acid formation, for example, results from industrial partial hydrogenation of vegetable oils (hardened vegetable oils) (Sommerfeld, 1983).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Increasingly, however, direct and indirect evidence points to adverse effects of industrially processed foods on the pandemic of obesity (Swinburn et al, 2004;Astrup et al, 2008) and of various chronic diseases such as type II diabetes (van Dam et al, 2002), cardiovascular disease (Hu et al, 2000;Fung et al, 2004) and cancer (Kesse et al, 2006;Ambrosini et al, 2008;Campbell et al, 2008;Chajes et al, 2008). Of particular concern are specific features of highly processed foods such as the fact that they are high in energy, fats, sugar and salt and poor in dietary fibre (Astrup et al, 2008), that other compounds may be added or generated during food processing (for example, colourants, additives, acrylamide, trans-fatty acids) (Dybing et al, 2005;Astrup et al, 2008;McCarthy et al, 2008) and that they are usually consumed in large portion sizes (Matthiesen et al, 2003). Trans-fatty acid formation, for example, results from industrial partial hydrogenation of vegetable oils (hardened vegetable oils) (Sommerfeld, 1983).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…9 The ORs for increasing quartiles of total acrylamide intake were 1.21 (95% CI, 0.94-1.57), 1.14 (95% CI, 0.86-1.51) and 1.20 (95% CI, 0.88-1.63) as compared to the lowest quartile, with no trend in risk (p 5 0.35). When we excluded the contribution of white bread consumption from the estimate of acrylamide intake, the OR for the highest vs. lowest quartile of acrylamide was 0.87 (95% CI, 0.65-1.14).…”
Section: Dear Sirmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This was later confirmed by others (Rosén and Hellenäs, 2002;World Health Organisation, 2002). To date a number of reports on the AA content of foods have been published, databases of the AA content in foods have been established, and researchers have estimated the average exposures to dietary AA in different populations (Dybing et al, 2005). Encouraged by the reports and the ensuing debate, the food industry has adjusted the manufacturing procedures to reduce the AA content of some marketed food products (CIAA, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%