Potentially toxic metals in small ruminant tissues: multivariate analysis and health risk assessment via Monte Carlo simulation
Alireza Fathi-Beyranvand, Azadeh Rashidimehr, Elaheh Askari, Fatemeh Esfarjani, Fatemeh Mohammadi-Nasrabadi

TL;DR
This study analyzed metal levels in small ruminant tissues in Iran to assess food safety and health risks, finding some metals exceeded safe limits.
Contribution
The study combines multivariate analysis and Monte Carlo simulation to evaluate health risks from metal contamination in small ruminants.
Findings
Zinc, nickel, and lead levels in some samples exceeded FAO/WHO limits.
Nickel in meat posed a moderate carcinogenic risk.
Multivariate analysis linked certain metals to natural or anthropogenic sources.
Abstract
Potentially toxic metal contamination in edible animal tissues is a major concern for food safety and public health. This study investigated the concentrations of essential and potentially toxic metals in the meat and liver of eighty small ruminants in Lorestan, Iran and assessed the risks associated with their consumption. Essential (Co, Se, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, and Zn) and potentially toxic (Ni, Cd, and Pb) metal concentrations were measured using ICP-OES. The sources and distribution patterns of essential and toxic trace metals were examined using multivariate statistical analyses including the Pearson correlation coefficient (PCC), principal component analysis (PCA) and hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA). Human health risk was evaluated using the lifetime cancer risk, the hazard ratio and the hazard index, and uncertainty in these parameters was quantified through Monte Carlo…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeavy metals in environment · Heavy Metal Exposure and Toxicity · Heavy Metals in Plants
