Foods, principally from plants in the family Solanaceae, and a number of teas were examined for the presence of nicotine. Dietary nicotine would give rise to cotinine in urine and compromise estimates of exposure to tobacco smoke that depend on urinary cotinine. All foods were homogenized, extracted
Acrylamide (AA), a substance classified as probably carcinogenic to humans, was detected for the first time in food products in 2002. AA can be primarily found in foods containing carbohydrates and proteins, where it is formed during the heating process. Exposure assessment based on food consumption