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Microplastics in a Traditional Turkish Dairy Product: Ayran

Polish Journal of Food and Nutrition Sciences 2023 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sanae Rbaibi Zipak, Sanae Rbaibi Zipak, Serkan Kemal Büyükünal, Serkan Kemal Büyükünal, Serkan Kemal Büyükünal, Karlo Muratoğlu Karlo Muratoğlu Sanae Rbaibi Zipak, Serkan Kemal Büyükünal, Karlo Muratoğlu Serkan Kemal Büyükünal, Karlo Muratoğlu Karlo Muratoğlu

Summary

Researchers tested traditional Turkish ayran, a yogurt-based beverage, and found microplastic contamination at multiple stages of production, from ingredients like water and salt to packaging materials. Fibers and fragments were the most common particle types detected across all samples. The study highlights that even traditional dairy products can be a source of human microplastic ingestion through contaminated ingredients and processing.

Ingestion of microplastic particles (MP) through food has been associated with a multitude of health problems in humans. Although ayran is a traditional and nutritious Turkish beverage, the impact of microplastic pollution is unknown. This study examined the incidence of microplastic pollution on ayran by collecting samples throughout the production processes and the ingredients used to make ayran, including water, salt, cream, starting culture, cups, and lastly, the ayran. Optical and scanning electron microscope was applied for MP visualisation and measurement, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) for polymer identification. Microplastics were detected in all examined filters except for the starter culture samples. The samples with the highest MP number were salty water (43 MP number/100 mL), salt (33 MP number/100 g), and milk samples taken from homogenization and pasteurization phases (26 MP number/100 mL). Additionally, 18 MP number/100 mL contamination was detected in the last product ayran. MP with a size range of 1–150 µm prevailed (37.38%). Ethylene propylene was the most frequently identified polymer in samples (39.30%). The findings of this study can help provide an overview of microplastic contamination in dairy production facilities and the potential human health risks associated with this microplastic exposure.

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