Is This Man A Good Pick For Secretary Of...
News4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by sglazier. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Rabelais - loving your answer.
the scientific evidence that Sudan 1 is carcinogenic is likely to have come from tests performed on rats and mice. tests that are required by law before any chemical/dye etc is allowed to be used in the UK for any product that we may come into contact with (foods, cleaning products, plant feed, medicines etc). These animals would have been given this chemical as part of their daily diets for their lifetime (1 or 2 years) and a huge amount of data on their condition in life and after death would then be evaluated. This is where the conclusion that it is a carcinogen is likey to have been reached (tho apologies, I've not checked that). This effect would be seen after intake of relatively large amounts of the chemical (relative to likely human intake) and over a very long period of time (equivalent of decades of our lives). To have eaten one or two meals/sauces with trace amounts of this chemical in it is not in any way going to increase your likelihood of getting cancer. This chemical was not intentionally added to these, or any other products we eat, and so prolonged exposure in humans via this route is not possible.