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Acceptable daily intakes veterinary drug residues

With respect to veterinary medicines, the US-FDA establishes tolerances to include a safety factor to assure that the drug will have no harmful effects on consumers of the food product. The US-FDA first determines the level at which the dmg does not produce any measurable effect in laboratory animals. From this, the US-FDA determines an acceptable daily intake (ADI), and the drug tolerance and withdrawal times are then determined so that the concentrations of dmg residues in edible tissues are below the ADI. Depending on the dmg, safety factors of between 100-fold to 2000-fold are included in the calculations used to set the tolerances. [Pg.364]

The most recently reported UK results on surveillance for veterinary drug residues in meat and animal products show that traces of these compounds can, and sometimes do, arise in food. As all of these compounds are biologically potent in order to be effective in use, it is necessary to ensure that any residual activity in a food product does not present a risk to the consumer. The use of veterinary medicines inevitably leads to the presence of trace residues in food and the purpose of toxicological safety evaluation is to determine at what concentration the residues of a particular compound becomes a cause for concern with regard to human health. Thus, dose-response relationships have to be established and used to determine the concentration of a dmg at which the risks to human health become acceptable and are outweighed by the benefits from the use of the drug. This is in essence the process involved in the setting of Acceptable Daily Intakes (ADIs) and... [Pg.143]

Specialists invited to serve as members of JECFA are independent scientists who serve in their individual capacities as experts and not as representatives of their governments or employers. They also understand that the discussions at the meetings are confidential. The goal is to establish acceptable daily intakes (ADIs) (or equivalent tolerable intakes) for food chemicals and to develop specifications for identity and purity for food additives or maximum residue limits (MRLs) when veterinary drugs are used in accordance with good practice in the use of veterinary drugs. [Pg.2903]

JECEA is an independent expert committee established (and jointly administered) by the FAO and the WHO in 1956 to evaluate the safety of food additives. Uie work has since expanded to include the evaluation of the safety of contaminants, naturally occurring toxicants and residues of veterinary drugs in food. JECFA serves as the risk assessor for the Codex Committee on Residues of Veterinary Drugs in Foods (CCRVDF), establishing an acceptable daily intake (ADI) for a veterinary drug when sufficient information is available, recommending maximum residue limits (MRLs) for consideration by... [Pg.265]


See other pages where Acceptable daily intakes veterinary drug residues is mentioned: [Pg.117]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.491]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.429]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.112 , Pg.116 ]




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