“…Under propitious environmental conditions, CIT is found in cereals (rice, wheat, maize, gram, and barley), fruits (coffee, grapes, and apples), nuts (hazelnuts and Brazil nuts), and spices (cumin, turmeric, and black pepper) with damp storage conditions augmenting their presence . CIT causes nephrotoxicity, mitogenicity, genotoxicity, and hepatotoxicity upon ingestion that prompted several countries to set their limit of the presence in food for public health safety. , Consequently, CIT’s limit in rice is marked up to 100 μg/kg by the European Union, 50 μg/kg by China, and 200 μg/kg by Japan with intermediate values for many other countries . Along with CIT, the frequent synergistic presence of two other mycotoxins, namely, aflatoxin B1 (AFL) and ochratoxin A (OCT), makes the situation worse since the simultaneous detection of all three mycotoxins with a single detection strategy has never been achieved with conviction.…”