Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay

Clean-up targets for toxic metals require that the site be “fit for purpose”. This means that targets are set with respect to defined receptors that reflect intended land-use. In this study, the likely threat of human exposure to toxic metals has been evaluated by simulating the human digestion proc...

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Main Authors: Hani A. Alhadrami, Lenka Mbadugha, Graeme I. Paton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-10-01
Series:Chemical Speciation & Bioavailability
Subjects:
TDI
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09542299.2016.1180961
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spelling doaj-a5cf54a25cdf4e5fb068cd75950dd2c22020-11-25T00:59:38ZengTaylor & Francis GroupChemical Speciation & Bioavailability0954-22992047-65232016-10-01281-4788710.1080/09542299.2016.11809611180961Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assayHani A. Alhadrami0Lenka Mbadugha1Graeme I. Paton2King Abdulaziz UniversityUniversity of AberdeenUniversity of AberdeenClean-up targets for toxic metals require that the site be “fit for purpose”. This means that targets are set with respect to defined receptors that reflect intended land-use. In this study, the likely threat of human exposure to toxic metals has been evaluated by simulating the human digestion process in vitro. The effects of key attributes (i.e. sample fraction size, pH, Kd and total metal concentrations) on the bioavailability of Cu and Ni were also investigated. Total metal concentration was the key explanatory factor for Cu and Ni bioavailability. A comparative ranking of metal concentrations in the context of tolerable daily intakes for Cu and Ni confirmed that the pH has the greatest impact on metals bioavailability. Rapid screening of key attributes and total toxic metal doses can reveal the relative hazard imposed on human, and this approach should be considered when defining threshold values for human protection.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09542299.2016.1180961Oral bioavailabilityhuman exposurein vitro digestion assayhazard and risk assessmentcopper and nickelTDI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hani A. Alhadrami
Lenka Mbadugha
Graeme I. Paton
spellingShingle Hani A. Alhadrami
Lenka Mbadugha
Graeme I. Paton
Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
Chemical Speciation & Bioavailability
Oral bioavailability
human exposure
in vitro digestion assay
hazard and risk assessment
copper and nickel
TDI
author_facet Hani A. Alhadrami
Lenka Mbadugha
Graeme I. Paton
author_sort Hani A. Alhadrami
title Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
title_short Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
title_full Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
title_fullStr Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
title_full_unstemmed Hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
title_sort hazard and risk assessment of human exposure to toxic metals using in vitro digestion assay
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Chemical Speciation & Bioavailability
issn 0954-2299
2047-6523
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Clean-up targets for toxic metals require that the site be “fit for purpose”. This means that targets are set with respect to defined receptors that reflect intended land-use. In this study, the likely threat of human exposure to toxic metals has been evaluated by simulating the human digestion process in vitro. The effects of key attributes (i.e. sample fraction size, pH, Kd and total metal concentrations) on the bioavailability of Cu and Ni were also investigated. Total metal concentration was the key explanatory factor for Cu and Ni bioavailability. A comparative ranking of metal concentrations in the context of tolerable daily intakes for Cu and Ni confirmed that the pH has the greatest impact on metals bioavailability. Rapid screening of key attributes and total toxic metal doses can reveal the relative hazard imposed on human, and this approach should be considered when defining threshold values for human protection.
topic Oral bioavailability
human exposure
in vitro digestion assay
hazard and risk assessment
copper and nickel
TDI
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09542299.2016.1180961
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AT lenkambadugha hazardandriskassessmentofhumanexposuretotoxicmetalsusinginvitrodigestionassay
AT graemeipaton hazardandriskassessmentofhumanexposuretotoxicmetalsusinginvitrodigestionassay
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