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Human health safety studies of a new insecticide: Dissipation kinetics and dietary risk assessment of afidopyropen and one of its metabolites in cucumber and nectarine.

To preliminarily study the law of natural dissipation and the relation to human health of a new insecticide (afidopyropen), the QuEChERS (Quick, Easy, Cheap, Effective, Rugged and Safe) method and a UHPLC-MS/MS system were used to extract and detect the afidopyropen and its metabolite (M440I007) from cucumber and nectarine. The limits of quantitation (LOQs) of both target compounds in two matrixes were reduced to 0.0001 mg/kg. Dissipative dynamics experiments indicated that afidopyropen residue dissipation is more consistent with a two-compartment kinetic model than a first-order kinetic model whether in cucumber or nectarine. The half-lives were less than 1.1 and 2.0 days in the distribution phase and up to 9.9 and 27.7 days in the elimination phase in cucumber and nectarine, respectively. The correlation coefficients were 0.9620, 0.9391, and 0.9923 for cucumber and 0.9676 and 0.9985 for nectarine from different locations. M440I007 initially increased rapidly, reached a maximum at 2 days, and then decreased gradually over time. Finally, dietary risk assessment indicated that the mixed residues of afidopyropen and M440I007 at the recommended dosage would not cause health concerns in population.

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