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2215746 
Journal Article 
Inorganic and Total Arsenic Contents in Rice-Based Foods for Children with Celiac Disease 
Munera-Picazo, S; Ramírez-Gandolfo, A; Burló, F; Carbonell-Barrachina, AA 
2014 
Yes 
Journal of Food Science
ISSN: 0022-1147
EISSN: 1750-3841 
79 
T122-T128 
English 
Celiac disease is an autoimmune disease that affects the villi of the small intestine causing abdominal pain, gas, diarrhea, or bad absorption due to gluten intolerance. The only treatment for this disease consists of a lifelong gluten free diet; this is, celiac people cannot consume products containing gluten, such as wheat, barley, and rye, but they can use rice and corn. Thus, rice flour is mainly used for the manufacturing of the basic products of this population. Unfortunately, rice can contain high contents of total (t-As) and inorganic (i-As) arsenic. The current study demonstrated that products for celiac children with a high percentage of rice contained high concentrations of arsenic (256 and 128 μg kg(-1) ). The daily intake of i-As ranged from 0.61 to 0.78 μg kg(-1) body weight (bw) in children up to 5 y of age; these values were below the maximum value established by the EFSA Panel (8.0 μg kg(-1) bw per day), but it should be considered typical of populations with a high exposure to this pollutant. Finally, legislation is needed to improve the labeling of these special rice-based foods for celiac children; label should include information about percentage, geographical origin, and cultivar of the used rice. 
dietary exposure; food safety; gluten-free food; infant food 
IRIS
• Arsenic Hazard ID
          PubMed
          Considered New
          PubMed
          WOS
          Considered New
          WOS
          Excluded
               WOS Duplicates
          WOS
          Excluded
               WOS Duplicates
     2. Lit Search Updates through Oct 2015
          PubMed
          WOS
          Considered
          Diet - Sources and Exposure
          Susceptibility Category
               Nutritional Deficiencies (includes socioeconomic status & BMI)
          Health Effect Category
               Not Relevant
• Arsenic (Inorganic)
     1. Literature
          Lit search updates through Oct 2015
     5. Susceptibility Screening
          Relevant
               Human
• Arsenic Susceptibility
     4. Susceptibility and Lifestages
          Nutritional deficiencies (includes socioeconomic status and BMI)
     5. Health Effect
          Not Relevant
     1. Susceptibility Literature Screening
          Keyword Search