The aroma of seared meat as your pan-fried steak is prepared may set your
tastebuds tingling – but it may also give the chef cancer, especially if
they are using a gas cooker.
Cooking fumes produced during high-temperature frying are already known to
cause cancer. In China, high lung cancer rates among chefs have been linked
to the practice of tossing food in a wok, often in a confined space, which
increases the concentration of hot oil in the breathing zone of the cook.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has also classified cooking
fumes as "probably carcinogenic". Now researchers from the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology in Trondheim have compared gas and
electric cooking methods, and found that gas produces higher levels of the
cancer-causing fumes.
They measured the fumes produced when frying 17 pieces of steak for 15
minutes each in conditions typical of Western restaurants, using margarine
or two different brands of soya oil. The results showed more naphthalene – a
banned substance contained in traditional mothballs – and mutagenic
aldehydes were produced when cooking with gas. Higher levels of ultrafine
particles, which penetrate deeper into the lung, were also produced on the
gas hob than on the electric one.
The authors, whose study is published in the journal Occupational and
Environmental Medicine, point out that the levels of the chemicals and
particulates found in their study were below accepted occupational safety
thresholds. But they add that cooking fumes contain other harmful components
for which there is no safety threshold, as yet, and which appear to be
higher with gas cooking. "Exposure to cooking fumes should be reduced as
much as possible," they say.
Cooking fumes are thought to cause lung cancer, as well as cancers of the
bladder and cervix. Previous research has found that cancer levels are
higher among chefs who did not have fume extractors in their kitchens than
among those who did.
Although smoking is the main cause of lung cancer in most countries, in
Taiwan only 10 per cent of women with lung cancer smoke. By comparison, 86
per cent of Taiwanese men with lung cancer smoke. Researchers suggest that
it is exposure to cooking fumes that accounts for the high rates of lung
cancer in women, despite their low smoking rates. A study by researchers
from the Institute of Medicine at Kaohsiung University in Taiwan
published in the American Journal of Epidemiology in 2000 found that the
longer women spent cooking food the higher the risk of lung cancer. Those
who cooked on a daily basis had the highest risk. Women who waited until the
oil was very hot before cooking the food increased their risk compared with
those who cooked at a lower temperature.
Source : Independent News and Media Limited