Aspergillus Section Flavi and aflatoxins in dusts generated by agricultural processing facilities in the Philippines
2006
Sales, A.C. | Yoshizawa, T.
Relatively few data exist regarding concentrations of aflatoxins and their causative organisms in dusts within occupational environments. Here, we examined Aspergillus Section Flavi populations and aflatoxin levels in 54 samples of dusts generated by agricultural processing facilities as possible indicators of aflatoxin exposure in the Philippines. The average incidence of Aspergillus Section Flavi expressed as a percentage of total mould populations in rice dust, corn dust, feed dust and copra dust were 8, 4, 31 and 10%, respectively. Predominant aflatoxigenic fungi isolated were Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus with ratios of 31:1, 40:5, 16:4 and 1:1 in rice dust, corn dust, feed dust and copra dust, respectively. Aflatoxins produced by selected isolates in in vitro rice culture ranged from 100 micrograms kg⁻¹ to 100.5 mg kg⁻¹. Toxigenicity of isolates based on the average aflatoxin concentrations produced by positive isolates were in the order of copra dust > corn dust > rice dust > feed dust. Average natural concentrations of aflatoxins in rice dust, corn dust, feed dust, and copra dust were 25, 6, 15 and 10 micrograms kg⁻¹, respectively. Estimates of the amount of inhaled aflatoxins by workers in an 8-h work shift ranged from 0.06 to 114 ng, the average of which is higher than the amount of aflatoxins ingested by Filipinos due to the consumption of polished rice. The presence of highly toxigenic Aspergillus Section Flavi and aflatoxins in agricultural dust is a critical health risk for workers, considering the frequency of exposure and the possibility of inhalation and subsequent absorption of aflatoxins in the respiratory tract.
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