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FileName
3760_ORCA.pdf
Title
Analysis of NHANES measured blood PCBs in the general US population and application of SHEDS model to identify key exposure factors
Authors
Jianping Xue, Shi V. Liu, Valerie G. Zartarian, Andrew M. Geller and Bradley D. Schultz
Keywords
Chemical Substances and Toxics, Risk Assessment, PCBs, dietary exposure, exposure modeling, biomonitoring
Date_Pub
2014
Pages
1-7
URL
NA
DocumentLocation
https://www7.nau.edu/itep/main/iteps/ORCA/3760_ORCA.pdf
Description
Studies have shown that the US population continues to be exposed to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), despite their ban more than three decades ago, but the reasons are not fully understood. The objectives of this paper are to characterize patterns of PCBs in blood by age, gender, and ethnicity, and identify major exposure factors. EPA’s Stochastic Human Exposure and Dose Simulation (SHEDS)-dietary exposure model was applied, combining fish tissue PCB levels from a NYC Asian Market survey with National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) dietary consumption data, and then linked with blood biomarkers for the same NHANES study subjects. Results reveal that the mean concentration of total PCBs in blood was higher with increasing age; however, for the same age, gender, and ethnicity, the blood PCB concentrations measured in the later NHANES survey were significantly lower than those in the earlier one. The decrease within an age group between the two survey periods lessened with increasing age. Blood PCBs among different ethnicities ranked differently between the older and the younger age groups within each survey. Non-Hispanic Blacks had significantly higher blood PCBs for the430 year age group. For the 12 tor30 year age group, the ‘‘Asian, Pacific Islander, Native American or multiracial’’ group had the highest values, with patterns fairly consistent with fish consumption and modeled PCB exposure patterns. We conclude that for younger people, patterns correspond to reduced environmental contamination over time, and are strongly associated with fish consumption and dietary exposures. Higher PCB concentrations in blood of the older population may partially reflect past exposures to higher environmental PCB concentrations, particularly before the ban.
CopyrightedMaterial
Tribal_Doc
Modified_by
Admin
Date_modified
5/18/2015 12:00:00 AM
Description
Chemical Substances and Toxics
SubDescription
Risk Assessment
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