Occupational exposure to mycotoxins in swine production: Environmental and biological monitoring approaches

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Abstract

Swine production workers are exposed simultaneously to multiple contaminants. Occupational exposure to aflatoxin B1 (AFB 1 ) in Portuguese swine production farms has already been reported. However, besides AFB1, data regarding fungal contamination showed that exposure to other mycotoxins could be expected in this setting. The present study aimed to characterize the occupational exposure to multiple mycotoxins of swine production workers. To provide a broad view on the burden of contamination by mycotoxins and the workers’ exposure, biological (urine) samples from workers (n = 25) and 38 environmental samples (air samples, n = 23; litter samples, n = 5; feed samples, n = 10) were collected. The mycotoxins biomarkers detected in the urine samples of the workers group were the deoxynivalenol-glucuronic acid conjugate (60%), aflatoxin M1 (16%), enniatin B (4%), citrinin (8%), dihydrocitrinone (12%) and ochratoxin A (80%). Results of the control group followed the same pattern, but in general with a lower number of quantifiable results (

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Viegas, S., Assunção, R., Martins, C., Nunes, C., Osteresch, B., Twarużek, M., … Viegas, C. (2019). Occupational exposure to mycotoxins in swine production: Environmental and biological monitoring approaches. Toxins, 11(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins11020078

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