"Descrizione" by FCS777 (5566 pt) | 2023-Aug-19 21:34 |
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Potassium metabisulphite is a chemical compound that belongs to the sulphite group, sulphur-based components that release sulphur dioxide SO2, an active preservative compound, a white granular powder.
The name defines the structure of the molecule
Description of raw materials used in production
Step-by-step summary of industrial chemical synthesis process.
The sulphite group includes:
Sulphur dioxide | E220 | SO2 |
Sodium sulphite | E221 | Na2SO3 |
Sodium hydrogen sulphite | E222 | NaHO3S |
Sodium metabisulphite | E223 | Na2O5S2 |
Potassium metabisulphite | E224 | K2O5S2 |
Calcium sulphite | E226 | CaSO3 |
Calcium hydrogen sulphite | E227 | CaH2O6S2 |
Potassium hydrogen sulphite | E228 | KHSO3 |
What it is used for and where
It is used in the food sector as preservative and antioxidant and is labeled in Europe with the number E224 in food additives.
Can give allergy.
Most significant studies
It is added to winesas preservative and appears on the label as "Sulfites", in vegetables and dried fruit and dried fruit, mushrooms and in many food products to increase the storage time (1).
It is also used to obtain better sensory qualities to foods (2).
In addition to essential oils, potassium metabisulfite (KMS) may be useful as a repellent for Drosophila suzukii, a globally invasive pest of soft-skinned fruit (3).
Safety
Symptoms attributable to sulphite sensitivity can be of varying nature and importance. The most common are headache and generalised itching or swelling, but cases of nausea, bronchoconstriction, diarrhoea, hypotension and shock have also occurred (4).
Sodium Sulfite, Ammonium Sulfite, Sodium Bisulfite, Potassium Bisulfite, Ammonium Bisulfite, Sodium Metabisulfite, and Potassium Metabisulfite are inorganic salts that function as reducing agents in cosmetic formulations. All except Sodium Metabisulfite also function as hair-waving/straightening agents. In addition, Sodium Sulfite, Potassium Sulfite, Sodium Bisulfite, and Sodium Metabisulfite function as antioxidants. Although Ammonium Sulfite is not in current use, the others are widely used in hair care products. Sulfites that enter mammals via ingestion, inhalation, or injection are metabolized by sulfite oxidase to sulfate. In oral-dose animal toxicity studies, hyperplastic changes in the gastric mucosa were the most common findings at high doses. Ammonium Sulfite aerosol had an acute LC(50) of >400 mg/m(3) in guinea pigs. A single exposure to low concentrations of a Sodium Sulfite fine aerosol produced dose-related changes in the lung capacity parameters of guinea pigs. A 3-day exposure of rats to a Sodium Sulfite fine aerosol produced mild pulmonary edema and irritation of the tracheal epithelium. Severe epithelial changes were observed in dogs exposed for 290 days to 1 mg/m(3) of a Sodium Metabisulfite fine aerosol. These fine aerosols contained fine respirable particle sizes that are not found in cosmetic aerosols or pump sprays. None of the cosmetic product types, however, in which these ingredients are used are aerosolized. Sodium Bisulfite (tested at 38%) and Sodium Metabisulfite (undiluted) were not irritants to rabbits following occlusive exposures. Sodium Metabisulfite (tested at 50%) was irritating to guinea pigs following repeated exposure. In rats, Sodium Sulfite heptahydrate at large doses (up to 3.3 g/kg) produced fetal toxicity but not teratogenicity. Sodium Bisulfite, Sodium Metabisulfite, and Potassium Metabisulfite were not teratogenic for mice, rats, hamsters, or rabbits at doses up to 160 mg/kg. Generally, Sodium Sulfite, Sodium Metabisulfite, and Potassium Metabisulfite were negative in mutagenicity studies. Sodium Bisulfite produced both positive and negative results. Clinical oral and ocular-exposure studies reported no adverse effects. Sodium Sulfite was not irritating or sensitizing in clinical tests. These ingredients, however, may produce positive reactions in dermatologic patients under patch test. In evaluating the positive genotoxicity data found with Sodium Bisulfite, the equilibrium chemistry of sulfurous acid, sulfur dioxide, bisulfite, sulfite, and metabisulfite was considered. This information, however, suggests that some bisulfite may have been present in genotoxicity tests involving the other ingredients and vice versa. On that basis, the genotoxicity data did not give a clear, consistent picture. In cosmetics, however, the bisulfite form is used at very low concentrations (0.03% to 0.7%) in most products except wave sets. In wave sets, the pH ranges from 8 to 9 where the sulfite form would predominate. Skin penetration would be low due to the highly charged nature of these particles and any sulfite that did penetrate would be converted to sulfate by the enzyme sulfate oxidase. As used in cosmetics, therefore, these ingredients would not present a genotoxicity risk. The Cosmetic Ingredient Review Expert Panel concluded that Sodium Sulfite, Potassium Sulfite, Ammonium Sulfite, Sodium Bisulfite, Ammonium Bisulfite, Sodium Metabisulfite, and Potassium Metabisulfite are safe as used in cosmetic formulations (5).
Molecular Formula : K2S2O5 or K2O5S2
Molecular Weight : 222.312 g/mol
UNII: 65OE787Q7W
CAS : 4429-42-9 16731-55-8
EC Number 240-795-3
Synonyms :
References_________________________________________________________________
(1) Diamante LM, Bai X, Busch J. Fruit Leathers: Method of Preparation and Effect of Different Conditions on Qualities. Int J Food Sci. 2014;2014:139890. doi: 10.1155/2014/139890. Epub 2014 May 4. Review.
Kumar A, Singh M, Singh G. Effect of different pretreatments on the quality of mushrooms during solar drying. J Food Sci Technol. 2013 Feb;50(1):165-70. doi: 10.1007/s13197-011-0320-5.
Sra SK, Sandhu KS, Ahluwalia P. Effect of treatments and packaging on the quality of dried carrot slices during storage. J Food Sci Technol. 2014 Apr;51(4):645-54. doi: 10.1007/s13197-011-0575-x.
(2) Diamante LM, Bai X, Busch J. Fruit Leathers: Method of Preparation and Effect of Different Conditions on Qualities. Int J Food Sci. 2014;2014:139890. doi: 10.1155/2014/139890.
(3) Renkema JM, Wright D, Buitenhuis R, Hallett RH. Plant essential oils and potassium metabisulfite as repellents for Drosophila suzukii (Diptera: Drosophilidae). Sci Rep. 2016 Feb 19;6:21432. doi: 10.1038/srep21432.
(4) Gunnison AF, Jacobsen DW. Sulfite hypersensitivity. A critical review. CRC Crit Rev Toxicol. 1987;17(3):185-214. doi: 10.3109/10408448709071208.
Abstract. Sulfiting agents (sulfur dioxide and the sodium and potassium salts of bisulfite, sulfite, and metabisulfite) are widely used as preservatives in foods, beverages, and pharmaceuticals. Within the past 5 years, there have been numerous reports of adverse reactions to sulfiting agents. This review presents a comprehensive compilation and discussion of reports describing reactions to ingested, inhaled, and parenterally administered sulfite. Sulfite hypersensitivity is usually, but not exclusively, found within the chronic asthmatic population. Although there is some disagreement on its prevalence, a number of studies have indicated that 5 to 10% of all chronic asthmatics are sulfite hypersensitive. This review also describes respiratory sulfur dioxide sensitivity which essentially all asthmatics experience. Possible mechanisms of sulfite hypersensitivity and sulfur dioxide sensitivity are discussed in detail. Sulfite metabolism and the role of sulfite oxidase in the detoxification of exogenous sulfite are reviewed in relationship to the etiology of sulfite hypersensitivity.
(5) Nair B, Elmore AR; Cosmetic Ingredients Review Expert Panel. Final report on the safety assessment of sodium sulfite, potassium sulfite, ammonium sulfite, sodium bisulfite, ammonium bisulfite, sodium metabisulfite and potassium metabisulfite. Int J Toxicol. 2003;22 Suppl 2:63-88.
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