Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6306931 | Chemosphere | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Incidental ingestion of indoor dust is an important pathway for human exposure to organophosphorus flame retardants (OPFRs) and phthalate esters (PAEs). However, little is known about their bioaccessibility in indoor dust. In this study, indoor dust samples were collected from houses, offices, public microenvironments (PMEs), and university dorms, and physiologically based extraction test (PBET) was used to measure the bioaccessibility of OPFRs and PAEs in these dust samples. Total concentrations of OPFRs in dust samples ranged from 0.01 to 63.2 μg gâ1, with significantly lower concentrations in dorm dust (median = 0.30 μg gâ1) than those in houses (3.12), offices (5.94), and PMEs (11.6). Total PAEs ranged from 5.49 to 2161 μg gâ1 with significantly lower concentrations in dorm dust (379 μg gâ1) than those in the other three types of dust (767, 515, and 731 μg gâ1). When subject to PBET, the bioaccessibility of OPFRs ranged from 8.18% (triphenyl phosphate) to 54.5% (Tris(2-chloroisopropyl) phosphate) for OPFRs, and from 1.21% (di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate, DEHP) to 81.1% (dimethyl phthalate) for PAEs. Estimated exposure doses for adults and infants to OPFRs via dust ingestion were much lower than the reference doses (RfD), but intake dose of DEHP for infants was higher than the RfD of 20 μg kgâ1 dâ1. However, the DEHP intake dose did not exceed the RfD after incorporating bioaccessibility into risk assessment. Our data indicated the importance of considering contaminant bioaccessibility during risk assessment of indoor dust.
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Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Ruiwen He, Yunzi Li, Ping Xiang, Chao Li, Chunyang Zhou, Shujun Zhang, Xinyi Cui, Lena Q. Ma,