Seasonal and geographical differences in aflatoxin exposures in Senegal


Autoria(s): Watson, S.; Diedhiou, P. M.; Atehnkeng, J.; Dem, A.; Bandyopadhyay, R.; Srey, C.; Routledge, M. N.; Gong, Y. Y.
Data(s)

04/02/2015

Resumo

The aim of the study was to determine the geographical and seasonal variations in aflatoxin dietary exposure levels in adults from Senegal. A total of 168 adults (50% male) were recruited from three districts: Nioro du Rip (n=90), located in the Sudan Savannah agro-ecological zone where rainfall is sufficient for groundnut growth; Saint-Louis (n=40) and Mboro (n=38), located in the Sahel zone where groundnuts are produced under irrigated conditions. Diet information and samples were collected at groundnut harvest and post-harvest seasons. Plasma aflatoxin-albumin adducts (AF-alb) and total aflatoxin in household groundnut samples were measured by ELISA and a quantitative thin layer chromatography method, respectively. The blood AF-alb geometric mean was 45.7 pg/mg albumin (range 5.5-588.2 pg/mg). Nioro du Rip had a higher AF-alb level at harvest than Saint-Louis and Mboro (80.0 vs 15.6 and 33.3 pg/mg, P<0.001). Similar trends were observed at post-harvest (P<0.05). Seasonal trends were not consistent across the districts as Nioro du Rip had a higher AF-alb level at harvest than post-harvest (80.0 vs 58.6 pg/mg, P=0.026), whereas Saint-Louis had a higher level at post-harvest than harvest (25.6 vs 15.6 pg/mg, P=0.032). It is clear that aflatoxin exposure is prevalent in adults from Senegal and that season and geographical location are strong determinants of aflatoxin exposure.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/seasonal-and-geographical-differences-in-aflatoxin-exposures-in-senegal(66effadc-5e29-4184-a707-ae7eb0d7937a).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/WMJ2014.1824

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Watson , S , Diedhiou , P M , Atehnkeng , J , Dem , A , Bandyopadhyay , R , Srey , C , Routledge , M N & Gong , Y Y 2015 , ' Seasonal and geographical differences in aflatoxin exposures in Senegal ' WORLD MYCOTOXIN JOURNAL , pp. 1-8 . DOI: 10.3920/WMJ2014.1824

Tipo

article