0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Heavy Metal Bioaccumulation in Peruvian Food and Medicinal Products

Foods 2024 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Teresa R. Tejada-Purizaca, Pablo A. García-Chevesich, Juana Ticona-Quea, Gisella Martínez, Kattia Martínez, Lino Morales-Paredes, Giuliana Romero-Mariscal, Armando Arenazas-Rodríguez, Gary Vanzin, Jonathan O. Sharp, John E. McCray

Summary

Researchers reviewed the scientific literature on heavy metal contamination in Peruvian food and medicinal products, synthesizing data from university theses and peer-reviewed journals. They found that many locally consumed foods and traditional remedies contained concerning levels of metals such as mercury, arsenic, and lead. The study calls attention to an under-communicated region where dietary metal exposure may pose significant public health risks.

To better query regional sources of metal(loid) exposure in an under-communicated region, available scientific literature from 50 national universities (undergraduate and graduate theses and dissertations), peer-reviewed journals, and reports published in Spanish and English were synthesized with a focus on metal(loid) bioaccumulation in Peruvian food and medicinal products utilized locally. The study considered 16 metal(loid)s that are known to exert toxic impacts on humans (Hg, Al, Sb, As, Ba, Be, Cd, Cr, Sn, Ni, Ag, Pb, Se, Tl, Ti, and U). A total of 1907 individual analyses contained within 231 scientific publications largely conducted by Peruvian universities were analyzed. These analyses encompassed 239 reported species classified into five main food/medicinal groups-plants, fish, macroinvertebrates and mollusks, mammals, and "others" category. Our benchmark for comparison was the World Health Organization (Codex Alimentarius) standards. The organisms most frequently investigated included plants such as asparagus, corn, cacao, and rice; fish varieties like trout, tuna, and catfish; macroinvertebrates and mollusks including crab and shrimp; mammals such as alpaca, cow, chicken eggs, and milk; and other categories represented by propolis, honey, lichen, and edible frog. Bioaccumulation-related research increased from 2 to more than 25 publications per year between 2006 and 2022. The results indicate that Peruvian food and natural medicinal products can have dangerous levels of metal(loid)s, which can cause health problems for consumers. Many common and uncommon food/medicinal products and harmful metals identified in this analysis are not regulated on the WHO's advisory lists, suggesting the urgent need for stronger regulations to ensure public safety. In general, Cd and Pb are the metals that violated WHO standards the most, although commonly non-WHO regulated metals such as Hg, Al, As, Cr, and Ni are also a concern. Metal concentrations found in Peru are on many occasions much higher than what has been reported elsewhere. We conclude that determining the safety of food/medicinal products is challenging due to varying metal concentrations that are influenced not only by metal type but also geographical location. Given the scarcity of research findings in many regions of Peru, urgent attention is required to address this critical knowledge gap and implement effective regulatory measures to protect public health.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

The coexistence characteristics of microplastics and heavy metals in rhizomes of traditional Chinese medicine in mulch planting area

Researchers examined eight types of traditional Chinese medicine root products and found microplastic contamination in all of them, with concentrations ranging from about 21 to 44 particles per gram. The dominant microplastic types were polyurethane and acrylic fragments, and these particles showed a tendency to carry heavy metals like arsenic, lead, and chromium. The findings raise concerns about unintentional human exposure to both microplastics and associated toxic metals through herbal medicine consumption.

Article Tier 2

Bibliometric and visual analysis of heavy metal health risk assessment: development, hotspots and trends

Researchers conducted a bibliometric analysis of heavy metal health risk assessment literature from 2000 to 2022, identifying development trends and research hotspots. The study reveals growing global attention to environmental heavy metal contamination, which often co-occurs with microplastic pollution in soil and water systems.

Article Tier 2

Mercury Contamination and Co‑exposures in the Amazon Basin: At the Center of the Planetary Environmental Crisis

This review synthesizes recent evidence on mercury contamination in the Amazon basin and its effects on the health of Indigenous and traditional communities. Researchers found consistent associations between mercury exposure and neurocognitive impairments, cardiovascular risk, and metabolic problems. The study also highlights emerging co-exposures to microplastics and agrochemicals in the region, raising concerns about synergistic toxic effects that remain poorly understood.

Review Tier 2

Global hotspots and trends in interactions of microplastics and heavy metals: a bibliometric analysis and literature review

This bibliometric review analyzed over 550 published studies on how microplastics interact with heavy metals in the environment. The research shows that microplastics can absorb heavy metals from surrounding water and soil, concentrating these toxic substances and carrying them into living organisms. This combined contamination is a growing concern for human health because microplastics may deliver concentrated doses of heavy metals into the body through food and water.

Article Tier 2

Heavy Metal Concentration and Human Health Risk Assessment of Selected Brands of Seasoning Powder Sold in Port Harcourt, Nigeria

Researchers assessed heavy metal concentrations in four brands of seasoning powder sold in Port Harcourt, Nigeria, and found levels of arsenic, lead, cadmium, and other metals that posed potential human health risks, highlighting food safety concerns in the region.

Share this paper