Acceptable daily intake
Acceptable Daily Intake or ADI is a measure of a specific substance (usually a food additive) in foodor drinking waterthat can be ingested over a lifetime without an appreciable health risk. ADIs are expressed by body mass, usually in milligrams per kilograms of body mass.
This concept was first introduced in 1957 by the Council of Europeand later the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives(JECFA) of the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organizationand the World Health Organization.
An ADI value is based on current research, with long-term studies on animals and observations of humans. First, a No Observable (Adverse) Effect Level, the amount of a substance that causes no toxic effects, is determined. Then, the NOEL (or NOAEL) is scaled by a safety factor, usually 100, to account for the lack of positive reliability on animal testing and possible differences in sensitivity in the human population. The ADI is usually given in mg per kg body weight per day. Note that the ADI is considered a safe intake level for the healthy adult of normal weight who consumes the average amount of the substance in question, not for small children or weak persons.
External links
- Questions and Answers about Acceptable Daily Intake
- US Food and Drug Administration's Cumulative Estimated Daily Intake/Acceptable Daily Intake Database for food contact substancesde:Erlaubte Tagesdosis
fr:Apport journalier recommandé
nl:Aanvaardbare Dagelijkse Inname
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acceptable+daily+intake Wikipedia article Acceptable daily intake.
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