Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust

In indoor environments, humans ingest chemicals present as surface residues and bound to settled particles (dust), through mouthing hands (hand-to-mouth transfer) and objects (object-to-mouth transfer). Here, we introduce a novel modeling approach in support of systematic investigation into the mout...

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Main Authors: Li Li, Lauren Hughes, Jon A. Arnot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Environment International
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412020322212
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spelling doaj-39e0cd34a2904e7da316073aa1b8078c2020-12-27T04:27:55ZengElsevierEnvironment International0160-41202021-01-01146106266Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dustLi Li0Lauren Hughes1Jon A. Arnot2School of Community Health Sciences, University of Nevada Reno, Reno, NV 89557, United States; Corresponding author at: 1664 N. Virginia Street, Mail Stop 0274, Reno, NV 89557-0274, United States.ARC Arnot Research & Consulting, Toronto, Ontario M4M 1W4, CanadaARC Arnot Research & Consulting, Toronto, Ontario M4M 1W4, Canada; Department of Physical & Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario M1C 1A4, Canada; Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, CanadaIn indoor environments, humans ingest chemicals present as surface residues and bound to settled particles (dust), through mouthing hands (hand-to-mouth transfer) and objects (object-to-mouth transfer). Here, we introduce a novel modeling approach in support of systematic investigation into the mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals present in indoor environments. This model explicitly considers the indoor dynamics of dust and chemicals, building on mechanistic links with physicochemical properties of chemicals, features of the indoor environment, and human activity patterns. The evaluation of this model demonstrates that it satisfactorily reproduces chemical hand loadings and exposure data reported in the literature. We then use the evaluated model to investigate the response of mouthing-mediated ingestion to chemical partitioning between the gas phase and solid phases, expressed as the octanol–air partition coefficient (KOA). Assuming a unit emission rate to the indoor environment, we find that low-volatility chemicals (with a KOA greater than 109) are more efficiently enriched in hand skin, resulting in higher mouthing-mediated ingestion than other compounds. For individuals living in a room with a typical level of dustiness, more than half of the chemical mass found in their hands comes from dust transfer, whereas more than half of the chemical mass ingested is the fraction present as residues on hands. We also use the new model to explore how the mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals is dependent on factors describing the indoor environment and human behavior. The model predicts that less frequent cleaning leads to higher accumulation of dust on indoor surfaces, thereby transferring more chemicals to hands and mouth in each contact. Introducing more dust into the room, but maintaining the same cleanup frequency, increases the dustiness of indoor surfaces, which promotes the transfer of relatively volatile chemicals (with a KOA lower than 109) to hands and mouth but decreases the transfer of chemicals with low volatility. More frequent hand contact with indoor surfaces increases both the hand loading and mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals, but the increases are more remarkable for adults than children because the higher surface contact frequency of children “saturates” hand loadings. An increase in handwashing frequency lowers the hand loading and mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals and this mitigating process is more prominent for relatively volatile chemicals. The new evaluated modeling approach can facilitate the prediction of mouthing-mediated ingestion for various age groups and the model predictions can be used to aid future fate and (bio)monitoring studies focusing on indoor contamination.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412020322212Mouthing-mediated ingestionDustHand-to-mouthObject-to-mouthHand loadingHandwipe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Li Li
Lauren Hughes
Jon A. Arnot
spellingShingle Li Li
Lauren Hughes
Jon A. Arnot
Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
Environment International
Mouthing-mediated ingestion
Dust
Hand-to-mouth
Object-to-mouth
Hand loading
Handwipe
author_facet Li Li
Lauren Hughes
Jon A. Arnot
author_sort Li Li
title Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
title_short Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
title_full Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
title_fullStr Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
title_full_unstemmed Addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
title_sort addressing uncertainty in mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals on indoor surfaces, objects, and dust
publisher Elsevier
series Environment International
issn 0160-4120
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In indoor environments, humans ingest chemicals present as surface residues and bound to settled particles (dust), through mouthing hands (hand-to-mouth transfer) and objects (object-to-mouth transfer). Here, we introduce a novel modeling approach in support of systematic investigation into the mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals present in indoor environments. This model explicitly considers the indoor dynamics of dust and chemicals, building on mechanistic links with physicochemical properties of chemicals, features of the indoor environment, and human activity patterns. The evaluation of this model demonstrates that it satisfactorily reproduces chemical hand loadings and exposure data reported in the literature. We then use the evaluated model to investigate the response of mouthing-mediated ingestion to chemical partitioning between the gas phase and solid phases, expressed as the octanol–air partition coefficient (KOA). Assuming a unit emission rate to the indoor environment, we find that low-volatility chemicals (with a KOA greater than 109) are more efficiently enriched in hand skin, resulting in higher mouthing-mediated ingestion than other compounds. For individuals living in a room with a typical level of dustiness, more than half of the chemical mass found in their hands comes from dust transfer, whereas more than half of the chemical mass ingested is the fraction present as residues on hands. We also use the new model to explore how the mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals is dependent on factors describing the indoor environment and human behavior. The model predicts that less frequent cleaning leads to higher accumulation of dust on indoor surfaces, thereby transferring more chemicals to hands and mouth in each contact. Introducing more dust into the room, but maintaining the same cleanup frequency, increases the dustiness of indoor surfaces, which promotes the transfer of relatively volatile chemicals (with a KOA lower than 109) to hands and mouth but decreases the transfer of chemicals with low volatility. More frequent hand contact with indoor surfaces increases both the hand loading and mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals, but the increases are more remarkable for adults than children because the higher surface contact frequency of children “saturates” hand loadings. An increase in handwashing frequency lowers the hand loading and mouthing-mediated ingestion of chemicals and this mitigating process is more prominent for relatively volatile chemicals. The new evaluated modeling approach can facilitate the prediction of mouthing-mediated ingestion for various age groups and the model predictions can be used to aid future fate and (bio)monitoring studies focusing on indoor contamination.
topic Mouthing-mediated ingestion
Dust
Hand-to-mouth
Object-to-mouth
Hand loading
Handwipe
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412020322212
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