Chemical found in rocket fuel detected in fruits, dairy and meat: Consumer Reports

Perchlorate has been closely monitored for decades after being found in food and water. In 2003, the Environmental Working Group tested lettuce for perchlorate and detected it in nearly 20% of supermarket samples, often at high levels.Consumer Reports noted that the EPA established an “official reference dose” two years later, basically a safe exposure level, for perchlorate of 0.7 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day. The Eferrous gluconate 325 mg walmarturopean Food Safety Authority established a threshold of half that amount.According to the FDA, exposure to high dosages of perchlorate can interfere with the thyroid gland, disrupting the metabolism of adults and impacting the growth and development of the central nervous system in fetuses and infants.Tunde Akinleye, a chemist who oversaw the testing for Consumer Reports, said in the report that the group decided to review foods following a “lack of action from regulatory agencies, which has led to a gap in our understanding of just how pervasive perchlorate currently is in our food.” In a response to Food Dive, the EPA said it is revieferrous gluconate tablets uspwing the report. Consumer Reports discovered that baby and kid food had the highest perchlorate level at 19.4 ppb, followed by fruits and vegetables at 9.3 ppb, baked products and grains at 6.9 ppb, dairy aferrous fumarate 140mg 5ml oral solutiont 6.2 ppb and meat products at 5.3 ppb. None of the foods tested had perchlorate levels high enough to exceed the EFSA or EPA’s suggested daily limits, Consumer Reports said.The advocacy group also studied packaging, with foods in plastic containers having the highest levels (averaging nearly 54 ppb), fferrous gluconate cvsollowed by foods in plastic wrap and paperboard.James E. Rogers, director of product sliquid ferrous sulfateafety testing at Consumer Reports, said “regulators should do more to protect the public from contaminants like perchlorate, but at the same time, parents shouldn’t panic about what we found.”It’s unlikely that the report will have any meaningful impact on the long-term consumption of foods tested by the advocacy group, or lead to changes at the companies that produce them, especially with perchlorate levels coming below what regulators would consider unsafe. The report could, however, place additional public attention on perchlorate and prompt the EPA and other regulators to conduct further review of the chemical. 

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