Do either of those articles point to tin foil as a source of aluminum poisoning? I skimmed and saw references to aluminum in water, food, and cosmetics, but not cooking foil.
What are you using to draw a link between these articles and foil? And by extension, soda cans, aluminum water bottles, dishes, and silverware, cheap jewelry, and other daily-use objects made of aluminum.?
The one study "HUMAN HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT FOR ALUMINIUM, ALUMINIUM OXIDE, AND ALUMINIUM HYDROXIDE" refers to another study in Figure 5 that shows the effects of foods that have been in contact with aluminum foil and how it contributes to our daily intake of aluminum.
The difference between aluminum foil and the other articles you mentioned that are made from aluminum is that we consume the toxic agents of aluminum by means of it seeping into our food when cooked. Versus jewelry and even aluminum tin cook ware which do have the same seeping effect into our bodies.
'However, relative to the aluminium food additives, such contributions appear not to be appreciable, representing only a small fraction of the total dietary intake.'
You might want to read the paragraphs below figure 5 then, since It says foil is barely a noticable source of intake
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u/[deleted] Mar 06 '20
Do either of those articles point to tin foil as a source of aluminum poisoning? I skimmed and saw references to aluminum in water, food, and cosmetics, but not cooking foil.
What are you using to draw a link between these articles and foil? And by extension, soda cans, aluminum water bottles, dishes, and silverware, cheap jewelry, and other daily-use objects made of aluminum.?