Quinolizidine alkaloids in organic sweet lupines used for sow feed
- Classification
- Alert notification
- Risk
- Serious
- Category
- feed materials
- Origin
- Poland
- Notifier
- Denmark
What is this? Sweet lupines are beans grown for animal food. They can sometimes contain natural poisons called quinolizidine alkaloids.
What's happening? Some organic sweet lupines from Poland have too much of these poisons. They were sent to farms in Denmark and Poland for pig food.
Does this affect me? If you don’t eat pork from these farms, you are not at risk. The pork itself is safe.
What should I do? If you have questions, ask your doctor or pharmacist. Do not feed these beans to animals.
🤖 This plain-language summary is automatically generated from the official agency notice using AI. It is for general information only — not medical advice. For decisions about your health, always consult a pharmacist or doctor and read the official source linked below.
🔬 Medical / technical details (for professionals)
Classification: Alert notification · Risk: Serious · Category: feed materials · Origin: Poland · Notifier: Denmark
All information on this page comes from the official agency notice. We translate and summarise it; we don't add or edit facts.