Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5749101 Environmental Pollution 2017 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Vegetable and cereal ingestion were the main contributors to exposure of Pb/Cr and Mn/Cd, respectively.•Concentrations of Pb/Cr in vegetables grown near MSWI were significantly higher.•Blood concentrations of Pb/Cr in populations near MSWI were significantly higher.•MSWI-local food-human is an important exposure pathway for residents living near MSWI.

The potential health effects of toxic chemicals (e.g. heavy metals) emitted by municipal solid waste incinerators (MSWIs) are of great concern to local residents, however there have been few studies on the contributions of different exposure pathways and their subsequent effects on the body burden of residents living near MSWIs. In this study, multiple exposure routes of heavy metals including Pb, Cr, Cd and Mn were assessed by investigating the metals in foods (such as vegetables, crops, meats and fruits etc.), drinking water, ambient air and soil collected surrounding an MSWI in Shenzhen, south China. Vegetable ingestion played the most important role in the total average daily dose of Pb and Cr, and cereals were the key exposure routes for Mn and Cd. Compound-specific contaminations were observed in the investigated areas, with Pb and Cr present in the surrounding environment, having accumulated to relatively high levels in the local vegetables, and the intake of contaminated vegetable foods greatly influencing the body burden of Pb and Cr. Consistently, significantly high blood concentrations of Pb and Cr were detected in the local residents compared to a referenced population, and a lack of significant differences was found for Cd and Mn. The results possibly suggested that emission of MSWI influenced the external exposure doses of the major pathways of Pb and Cr in this study, and resulted in the different body burden of metals in humans living near a MSWI. MSWI-local food-humans is an important exposure pathway for residents living near MSWI, and thus should not be neglected in developing future strategies and policies to prevent the high risks suffered by residents living near MSWIs.

Graphical abstractDownload high-res image (295KB)Download full-size image

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
Authors
, , , , ,