Publications by authors named "Rie Romme Rasmussen"

The oral bioaccessibility of several essential and toxic elements was investigated in raw and cooked commercially available seafood species from European markets. Bioaccessibility varied between seafood species and elements. Methylmercury bioaccessibility varied between 10 (octopus) and 60% (monkfish).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

When microplastics pollute fish habitats, it may be ingested by fish, thereby contaminating fish with sorbed contaminants. The present study investigates how combinations of halogenated contaminants and microplastics associated with feed are able to alter toxicokinetics in European seabass and affect the fish. Microplastic particles (2%) were added to the feed either with sorbed contaminants or as a mixture of clean microplastics and chemical contaminants, and compared to feed containing contaminants without microplastics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mitigation of contaminants in industrial processing was studied for prawns (cooked and peeled), Greenland halibut (cold smoked) and Atlantic salmon (cold smoked and trimmed). Raw prawns had significantly higher cadmium, chromium, iron, selenium and zinc content in autumn than in spring, while summer levels typically were intermediate. Peeling raw prawns increased mercury concentration but reduced the concentration of all other elements including inorganic arsenic, total arsenic, chromium, zinc, selenium but especially cadmium, copper and iron (p < 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The presence of cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), mercury (THg), methylmercury (MeHg), arsenic (TAs), inorganic arsenic (iAs), cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), nickel (Ni), chromium (Cr) and iron (Fe) was investigated in seafood collected from European marine ecosystems subjected to strong anthropogenic pressure, i.e. hotspot areas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Maize silage, a common cattle feed, can be contaminated with mycotoxins, raising concerns for farmers and consumers in Denmark.
  • A study analyzed 99 maize samples for 27 mycotoxins using advanced liquid chromatography, finding that 61 samples had detectable mycotoxins, with zearalenone and nivalenol being the most prevalent.
  • Despite none of the samples exceeding EU safety limits for mycotoxins, the presence of multiple fungal metabolites in some samples indicates a need for further research into the potential effects of chronic exposure and their combined impacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF