Can Eating Burnt Foods Causes Cancer?
Overcooking items including toast, roast
potatoes, chips, and vegetables, according to health experts, can cause cancer.
According to the Food Standards Agency, starchy foods cooked at high
temperatures for too long produce acrylamide, a carcinogenic chemical.
When starchy foods are cooked at high temperatures, a chemical substance called
acrylamide forms. A chemical interaction between specific carbohydrates and an
amino acid (asparagine) in the diet causes it to develop.
When muscle meat, such
as beef, pig, fish, or chicken, is cooked at high temperatures, such as pan
frying or grilling directly over an open flame, compounds called heterocyclic
amines (HCAs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are generated. HCAs
and PAHs have been discovered to be mutagenic in laboratory trials, meaning
they create changes in DNA that may raise the risk of cancer.
When amino acids,
carbohydrates, and creatine or creatinine (muscle-derived compounds) react at
high temperatures, HCAs are generated. When fat and fluids from meat cooked
directly over a hot surface or an open fire fall onto the surface or fire,
generating flames and smoke, PAHs are generated.
The smoke contains
PAHs, which stick to the meat's surface. Other food preparation techniques,
such as smoking meats, can also produce PAHs. Other than meat cooked at high
temperatures, HCAs are not present in substantial concentrations in meals.
Other smoked foods, as well as cigarette smoke
and automobile exhaust gases, include PAHs.
There is no conclusive
association between HCA and PAH exposure from cooked meats and cancer in
people, according to population research. One challenge in performing such
research is determining the precise degree of HCA and/or PAH exposure a person
receives from grilled meats. Although dietary surveys can offer accurate
estimates, they may not include all of the information regarding cooking
processes needed to calculate HCA and PAH exposure levels. Furthermore, even
among persons who consume (take in) the same quantity of HCAs and PAHs,
individual variation in the activity of enzymes that metabolize these
substances may result in exposure disparities. People may have been exposed to
PAHs from a variety of sources other than diet.
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