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Openai/693729b0-67a8-800d-a59c-e58217d63182
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=== β Is AOZ carcinogenic? === Yes β AOZ is treated as a potential carcinogenic risk. * AOZ is one of several nitrofuran metabolites linked to carcinogenicity in animal studies. * Because of this, the EU, US FDA, and many countries have set a zero-tolerance policy for nitrofuran residues in food-producing animals. * Thatβs why any detectable amount (even very small) triggers a red flag in lab reports. So the highlighted red result means: π AOZ was detected above the labβs limit of quantification (LOQ 0.4 Β΅g/kg). π This suggests the food item tested contains a residue of a nitrofuran metabolite with suspected carcinogenic potential.
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