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Formation and occurrence of nitrosamines in food.
Cancer Res. 1983 May; 43(5 Suppl):2435s-2440s.CR

Abstract

Nitrosamines are formed by reaction of secondary or tertiary amines with a nitrosating agent. In foods, the nitrosating agent is usually nitrous anhydride, formed from nitrite in acidic, aqueous solution. Food constituents and the physical make-up of the food can effect nitrosamine formation. Ascorbic acid and sulfur dioxide are used to inhibit nitrosamine formation in foods. Nitrosodimethylamine has been shown to be formed in certain foods as a result of the direct-fire drying process. In this case, oxides of nitrogen in the drying air nitrosate amines in the food being dried. The volatile nitrosamine which occurs most commonly in food is nitrosodimethylamine, and nitrosopyrrolidine occurs to a lesser extent. Due to limitations in analytical methodology, very little information is available on the levels of nonvolatile nitrosamines and other N-nitroso compounds in foods. Foods which have been shown to contain volatile nitrosamines include cured meats, primarily cooked bacon; beer; some cheeses; nonfat dry milk; and sometimes fish. It should be emphasized that not all samples analyzed contain detectable amounts of nitrosamines. When present, the volatile nitrosamines usually occur in the lower microgram/kg range. Estimates by several investigators suggest that the average daily intake of volatile nitrosamines from foods is approximately 1 microgram/person.

Authors

No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

6831466

Citation

Scanlan, R A.. "Formation and Occurrence of Nitrosamines in Food." Cancer Research, vol. 43, no. 5 Suppl, 1983, 2435s-2440s.
Scanlan RA. Formation and occurrence of nitrosamines in food. Cancer Res. 1983;43(5 Suppl):2435s-2440s.
Scanlan, R. A. (1983). Formation and occurrence of nitrosamines in food. Cancer Research, 43(5 Suppl), 2435s-2440s.
Scanlan RA. Formation and Occurrence of Nitrosamines in Food. Cancer Res. 1983;43(5 Suppl):2435s-2440s. PubMed PMID: 6831466.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Formation and occurrence of nitrosamines in food. A1 - Scanlan,R A, PY - 1983/5/1/pubmed PY - 1983/5/1/medline PY - 1983/5/1/entrez SP - 2435s EP - 2440s JF - Cancer research JO - Cancer Res VL - 43 IS - 5 Suppl N2 - Nitrosamines are formed by reaction of secondary or tertiary amines with a nitrosating agent. In foods, the nitrosating agent is usually nitrous anhydride, formed from nitrite in acidic, aqueous solution. Food constituents and the physical make-up of the food can effect nitrosamine formation. Ascorbic acid and sulfur dioxide are used to inhibit nitrosamine formation in foods. Nitrosodimethylamine has been shown to be formed in certain foods as a result of the direct-fire drying process. In this case, oxides of nitrogen in the drying air nitrosate amines in the food being dried. The volatile nitrosamine which occurs most commonly in food is nitrosodimethylamine, and nitrosopyrrolidine occurs to a lesser extent. Due to limitations in analytical methodology, very little information is available on the levels of nonvolatile nitrosamines and other N-nitroso compounds in foods. Foods which have been shown to contain volatile nitrosamines include cured meats, primarily cooked bacon; beer; some cheeses; nonfat dry milk; and sometimes fish. It should be emphasized that not all samples analyzed contain detectable amounts of nitrosamines. When present, the volatile nitrosamines usually occur in the lower microgram/kg range. Estimates by several investigators suggest that the average daily intake of volatile nitrosamines from foods is approximately 1 microgram/person. SN - 0008-5472 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/6831466/Formation_and_occurrence_of_nitrosamines_in_food_ L2 - http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=6831466 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -