Occurrence of chlorate and perchlorate in bottled beverages in Japan

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Abstract

The concentrations of chlorate and perchlorate were examined by ion chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (IC-MS-MS) in 106 bottled beverages purchased or obtained mainly in the Tokyo area to estimate exposure to these chemicals attributable to bottled beverages. The bottled beverages were classified into 5 categories: water from the water supply (n = 5), natural water (n = 49), bottled water (n = 10), tea (n = 25), and soft drinks (n = 17). Chlorate was detected in 85 bottled beverages (highest concentration, 700 μg/l), including all of the samples of bottled water from the water supply at levels ranging from 25 to 120 μg/l. Perchlorate was detected above the minimum reporting limit (i.e., 0.05μg/l) from 62 bottled beverages, with the highest concentration of 0.92 μg/l. As the average consumption of bottled beverages calculated from market statistics is approximately 400 ml/day per person, it seems important to take the amounts of chlorate and perchlorate ingested from bottled beverages into consideration for estimation of total intake of these chemicals. ©2009 The Pharmaceutical Society of Japan.

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APA

Asami, M., Kosaka, K., & Yoshida, N. (2009). Occurrence of chlorate and perchlorate in bottled beverages in Japan. Journal of Health Science, 55(4), 549–553. https://doi.org/10.1248/jhs.55.549

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