Awareness and Prevalence of Mycotoxin Contamination in Selected Nigerian Fermented Foods

尼日利亚部分发酵食品中霉菌毒素污染的认知度和流行情况

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作者:Ifeoluwa Adekoya, Patrick Njobeh, Adewale Obadina, Cynthia Chilaka, Sheila Okoth, Marthe De Boevre, Sarah De Saeger

Abstract

Fermented food samples (n = 191) including maize gruel (ogi), sorghum gruel (ogi-baba), melon seed (ogiri), locust bean (iru) and African oil bean seed (ugba) from Southwest Nigeria were quantified for 23 mycotoxins, including aflatoxin B&sub1; (AFB&sub1;), fumonisin B&sub1; (FB&sub1;), and sterigmatocystin (STE) using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The practices, perceived understanding and health risks related to fungal and mycotoxin contamination amongst fermented food sellers was also established. Data obtained revealed that 82% of the samples had mycotoxins occurring singly or in combination. FB&sub1; was present in 83% of ogi-baba samples, whereas 20% of ugba samples contained AFB&sub1; (range: 3 to 36 µg/kg) and STE was present in 29% of the ogi samples. In terms of multi-mycotoxin contamination, FB&sub1; + FB&sub2; + FB&sub3; + STE + AFB&sub1; + alternariol + HT-2 co-occurred within one sample. The awareness study revealed that 98% of respondents were unaware of mycotoxin contamination, and their education level slightly correlated with their level of awareness (p < 0.01, r = 0.308). The extent to which the analyzed mycotoxins contaminated these food commodities, coupled with the poor perception of the population under study on fungi and mycotoxins, justifies the need to enact fungal and mycotoxin mitigation strategies along the food chain.

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