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Food Additives And Contaminants • January 1995<br />

Estimates of<br />

dietary exposure to aluminium<br />

Author information<br />

Pennington JA1, Schoen SA.<br />

Food and Drug Administration<br />

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition<br />

Washington, DC 20204, USA<br />

Abstract<br />

Daily intakes of aluminium were estimated for 14 age-sex groups<br />

based on the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Total Diet<br />

Study dietary exposure model. The aluminium content of the core<br />

foods of the FDA Total Diet Study were determined by analyses,<br />

recipe calculation, or literature values and coupled with information<br />

on food consumption from the 1987-88 US Department of<br />

Agriculture Nationwide Food Consumption Survey. Estimates of<br />

aluminium intakes ranged from 0.7 mg/day for 6-11-month-old<br />

infants to 11.5 mg/day for 14-16-year-old males. Average intakes<br />

for adult men and women were 8-9 and 7 mg/day, respectively.<br />

The major contributors to daily intake of aluminium were foods<br />

with aluminium-containing food additives, e.g. grain products<br />

and processed cheese.<br />

“Estimates of aluminium intakes ranged<br />

from 0.7 mg/day for 6-11-month-old infants<br />

to 11.5 mg/day for 14-16-year-old males.<br />

Average intakes for adult men and women<br />

were 8-9 and 7 mg/day, respectively.”<br />

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7758626

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