Safety studies conducted on Pecan Shell Fiber, a food ingredient produced from ground pecan shells

Publication date: Available online 10 December 2015 Source:Toxicology Reports Author(s): Laurie Dolan, John Nizio, Ray Matulka Use of pecan shell fiber in human food is presently limited, but could increase pending demonstration of safety. In a 91-day rat study, pecan shell fiber was administered at dietary concentrations of 0 (control), 50 000, 100 000 or 150 000ppm. There was no effect of the ingredient on body weight of males or females or food consumption of females. Statistically significant increases in food consumption were observed throughout the study in 100 000 and 150 000ppm males, resulting in intermittent decreases in food efficiency (150 000ppm males only) that were not biologically relevant. All animals survived and no adverse clinical signs or functional changes were attributable to the test material. There were no toxicologically relevant changes in hematology, clinical chemistry or urinalysis parameters or organ weights in rats ingesting pecan shell fiber. Any macroscopic or microscopic findings were incidental, of normal variation and/or of minimal magnitude for test substance association. Pecan shell fiber was non-mutagenic in a bacterial reverse mutation test and non-clastogenic in a mouse peripheral blood micronucleus test. Based on these results, pecan shell fiber has an oral subchronic (13-week) no observable adverse effect level (NOAEL) of 150 000ppm in rats and is not genotoxic at the doses analyzed.
Source: Toxicology Reports - Category: Toxicology Source Type: research