Integrity, Authentication, Adulteration, Contamination and Quality Control of Botanicals Used in Foods, Novel Foods and Food Supplements
A special issue of Foods (ISSN 2304-8158). This special issue belongs to the section "Food Quality and Safety".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (29 February 2024) | Viewed by 6769
Special Issue Editors
Interests: phytochemistry; herbal and medicinal plants; plant bioactives; extraction and characterisation of natural compounds; botanicals
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
2. Wageningen Food Safety Research, Wageningen University & Research, 6700, AE, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Interests: food safety; natural toxins; food supplements integrity; metabolomics; mass spectrometry
Interests: plant science; natural products; metabolomics; structure elucidation; multivariate data analysis
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Botanicals must comply with all relevant requirements of multiple legislations regarding their composition, quality, and safety. Their presence, besides in foods and plant-based dietary supplements, also involves novel foods. The consistency of production, including between the label and actual content, is crucial wherever any claim is made for botanical-based preparation. At the same time, the absence of mislabelled plants and harmful substances, such as mycotoxins, contaminants, and undeclared pharmaceuticals must be warranted.
However, multiple concerns emerge regularly: botanical-based products are reportedly affected by unreliable content, batch-to-batch variability, substitution with cheaper ingredients and fillers, adulterations with undeclared substances, contamination with mycotoxins, and lack of authenticity. This scenario acts to the detriment of market fairness, of consumers' health, and trust in these products. To some extent, both conflicting results in clinical trials, difficult translations of scientific evidence into actual effectiveness, the emergence of adverse effects, and the unreliability of risk–benefit evaluations may be linked to erratic quality. This has prompted to advocate for stricter quality controls and more efficacious analytical approaches that are capable of dealing with multiple issues in a single analysis. At the same time, a proper evaluation of commercial products is often lacking, leading to unreliable estimates of the actual exposure to harmful substances that may be present in food supplements and in a growing number of novel foods based on plants.
In this Special Issue, we invite researchers to contribute original research and review articles on analytical methods aimed at the authentication and quality control of botanicals, food supplements, and novel foods based on plants. The detection and quantification of any form of adulteration, substitution, or contamination are also included. While spectroscopic, chromatographic, molecular, and pharmacognostic methods are welcome, if they are applied to actual commercial materials, a particular emphasis will be placed on metabolomic approaches. Special interest will be devoted to the screening of commercial products by means of consolidated analytical methods to pinpoint the actual extension of frauds, adulterations, and contaminations.
Dr. Renato Bruni
Dr. Laura Righetti
Dr. Manuela Mandrone
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- food supplements
- functional foods
- novel foods
- botanicals
- quality control
- metabolomics
- food integrity
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