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Microplastics in vacuum packages of frozen and glazed icefish (<em>Neosalanx</em> spp.): A freshwater fish intended for human consumption

Italian Journal of Food Safety 2021 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Luca Nalbone, Luca Nalbone, Luca Nalbone, Antonio Panebianco, Graziella Ziino, Luca Nalbone, Luca Nalbone, Luca Nalbone, Luca Nalbone, Luca Nalbone, Filippo Giarratana Filippo Giarratana Antonio Panebianco, Fabrizio Cincotta, Filippo Giarratana Filippo Giarratana Filippo Giarratana Filippo Giarratana Beatrice Romano, Antonio Panebianco, Luca Nalbone, Antonio Panebianco, Graziella Ziino, Graziella Ziino, Filippo Giarratana Antonio Panebianco, Fabrizio Cincotta, Antonio Panebianco, Filippo Giarratana Luca Nalbone, Filippo Giarratana

Summary

Microplastics were detected in vacuum-packaged frozen icefish sold in Italian supermarkets and imported from China, representing one of the first reports of microplastic contamination in a freshwater-origin food product and suggesting packaging as a potential contamination pathway.

Models
Study Type Environmental

It is widely accepted that human is exposed to microplastics through food consumption, however data occurrence in foodstuffs are still little and basically limited to seafood. In this study, the presence of microplastics was investigated in icefish (<i>Neosalanx</i> spp.) samples sourced from various mass-market retailers in Italy, supplied as frozen, glazed and vacuum-packed product. Icefish is a small freshwater fish widely imported in Europe from China as surrogate of other fish species subjected to commercial restriction, consumed whole after cooking in several culinary preparation. The samples (~10 g of icefish from each of the 40 packs tested) were digested using a solution of 10% potassium hydroxide and filtered through a 5 μm pore-size filter. Filters of the samples were observed under a stereomicroscope and the chemical composition of the items detected were analysed by FTIR spectroscopy. A total of 163 items were counted in 37 (92.5%) samples with a mean value of 0.42±0.28 items/g w.w. Fibers were the most detected morphotype and several plastic polymers, such as polypropylene, polyethylene, polyethylene terephthalate and polystyrene, were identified by FT-IR analysis. As store-bought samples, the sources of microplastics could be substantially related to contamination during food processing. However, an intravital exposure to microplastics present in the surroundings waters cannot be ruled out. More foodstuffs need to be investigated for microplastic presence. In this study, microplastic occurrence was reported in freshwater biota intended for human consumption sampled directly from supermarket contributing to the risk assessment of human exposure to microplastics via food consumption.

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