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Flame retardants have been showing up in some
surprising places, from human breast milk to peregrine falcon eggs.
Now this growing list can be expanded to include dietary supplements
based on cod liver oil, according to a new study.
European scientists have found that flame retardant
levels have increased significantly during the past four years in
products containing cod liver oil, a common component of dietary
supplements. The report appears in the April 7 edition of the
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a peer-reviewed
journal of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest
scientific society.
Fish and vegetable oils are in high demand as
dietary supplements because they contain omega 3 fatty acids, which
have been linked to various health benefits, including reduced risk of
heart disease.
In recent years, however, scientists have shown
that fish oils are prone to contamination by organic chemicals. For
example, researchers have found that farm-raised salmon contain more
contaminants than wild salmon, which they attribute partly to the fish
oils used to supplement salmon feed.
"We analyzed 21 commercially available fish and
vegetable oil dietary supplements for selected contaminants," says
Miriam Jacobs, Ph.D., who lectures in food safety and toxicology at
the University of Surrey in Guildford, U.K, and was one of the authors
of the latest study involving cod liver oil. The supplements,
purchased from retailers in the U.K., contained four classes of oils:
pure vegetable oils, fish and vegetable oil formulations, cod liver
oil and whole body fish oil.
Jacobs and her coworkers measured levels of
persistent organic pollutants in the supplements, including pesticides,
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs),
which are used widely as flame retardants. They then compared the
values with levels measured in the same brands purchased eight years
ago from the same retailers, and with fish oils used to supplement
salmon aquaculture feeds obtained four years ago. In earlier work,
Jacobs had found a relationship between pollutants in these feeds and
in farmed European salmon.
Supplements based on vegetable oil and whole body
fish oil showed little or no contamination throughout the current and
previous studies. "The cod liver oils have similar levels of PCBs and
pesticides compared to samples obtained from the same outlets," Jacobs
says. "But the levels of flame retardants are higher."
Flame retardant levels in cod liver oils from the
new study ranged from about 15-34 nanograms per gram of fat, while the
range was 0-13 only four years ago. "This is a relatively large
increase," Jacobs says. "The extensive use of these chemicals in
recent years means that they can get into places where they shouldn't
be, such as the marine environment."
The findings add to a growing number of studies
that have found flame retardants in unexpected places, from human
breast milk in the United States to peregrine falcon eggs in Sweden.
Not only does the new study have environmental
implications, but it could also have dietary repercussions. "It
suggests that a consumer can reduce her or his intake of the
persistent organic pollutants by changing to a formulation that
contains less cod liver oil, and that contains a proportion of
vegetable oil sources of omega 3 fatty acids," Jacobs says.
Vegetable oils contain short-chain fatty acids,
which are generally thought to offer less health benefit than the
long-chain fatty acids from fish oils. Researchers have shown, however,
that humans can metabolize and produce long-chain fatty acids from
short-chain vegetable sources. This metabolism may not be very
efficient, according to Jacobs, so a healthy adult would probably need
to consume 8-10 times more vegetable oil supplements to get similar
health benefits.
These are not definitive dietary recommendations,
Jacobs cautions. "We hope these findings will stimulate further
research into the newer pollutants to better protect the public and
the environment," she says. "Regulatory authorities conduct
food-monitoring programs for dioxins and PCBs, but far less so for
other contaminants."
Regulations should also consider other potential
routes of exposure, Jacobs says, including farmed salmon that are
fortified with fish oil to increase their omega 3 fatty acid content.
Fish oils are also used as feed supplements for farm animals,
including sheep, cows and chickens. |