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No acceptable daily intake for human consumption has been determined.
These tests resulted in a so-called 'acceptable daily intake' for animals.
There is no scientific mechanism to translate an acceptable daily intake into a maximum use level.
By testing toys, it can be indicated whether or not this 'acceptable daily intake' is exceeded in the case of humans.
That means that these substances are safe if their consumption stays below the acceptable daily intake.
Furthermore, Member States indicated that the acceptable daily intake for cyclamates might be exceeded in their country.
Acceptable daily intake - upper limit on intake (United Kingdom)
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that stable workers could have been exposed to as much as 190 times the acceptable daily intake.
Both substances have been evaluated by the Scientific Committee on Food and have been assigned an acceptable daily intake.
The image of food additives among consumers has deteriorated, even taking account of risk assessments and the concept of the acceptable daily intake.
The second part provides succinct summaries of the toxicological data examined and factors considered when evaluating selected substances and allocating an acceptable daily intake.
The World Health Organization has suggested acceptable daily intake limits of 0-25 mg of polyoxyethylene sorbitan esters per kg body weight.
The acceptable daily intake for total residues of ractopamine is 1.25 micrograms ractopamine hydrochloride per kilogram of body weight per day.
The main conclusion was that no acceptable daily intake can be established for any of the six hormones evaluated when they are administered to bovine animals for growth promotion.
European Community legislation limits the acceptable daily intake (ADI) of Brown FK to 0.15 mg/kg.
On the basis of this, EFSA concluded the acceptable daily intake of the colors analyzed in the Southampton study did not need to be altered.
In the present case the acceptable daily intake for cyclamates has been lowered from 11 to 7 milligrams per kilogram of body weight by the Scientific Committee on Food.
No acceptable daily intake (ADI) for Mirex has been advised by FAO/WHO.
The EFSA and the FDA discounted the study results and found no reason to revise their previously established acceptable daily intake levels for aspartame.
Despite the presence of the cyanide ligands, sodium ferrocyanide is not especially toxic (acceptable daily intake 0-0.025 mg/kg body weight)) because the cyanides are tightly bound to the metal.
These results established the acceptable daily intake (ADI) levels for CSL and SSL as 20 mg/kg bw/day.
Furthermore, the Commission proposes to reduce the intake of cyclamate, as an already authorised sweetener, for which the Scientific Committee on Food has considerably lowered the acceptable daily intake.
In 2010, Lamb established the no-observed-adverse-effect level of SSL at 5% of the total diet and recommended an acceptable daily intake of 22.1 mg/kg bw/day for human consumption.
Originally acceptable daily intake (ADI) was introduced in 1961 to define the daily intake of a food additive which, during the entire lifetime, appears to be without appreciable risk.
The resulting opinion, adopted as recently as December of last year, fully reconfirmed the safety of aspartame and that the intake of this sweetener remains well below the acceptable daily intake.