| Literature DB >> 17366773 |
Gabriela Concha1, Barbro Nermell, Marie Vahter.
Abstract
This study evaluated the spatial, temporal and inter-individual variations in exposure to arsenic via drinking-water in Northern Argentina, based on measurements of arsenic in water, urine, and hair. Arsenic concentrations in drinking-water varied markedly among locations, from <1 to about 200 microg/L. Over a 10-year period, water from the same source in San Antonio de los Cobres fluctuated within 140 and 220 microg/L, with no trend of decreasing concentration. Arsenic concentrations in women's urine (3-900 microg/L, specific weight 1.018 g/mL) highly correlated with concentrations in water on a group level, but showed marked variations between individuals. Arsenic concentrations in hair (range 20-1,500 microg/kg) rather poorly correlated with urinary arsenic, possibly due to external contamination. Thus, arsenic concentration in urine seems to be a better marker of individual arsenic exposure than concentrations in drinking-water and hair.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17366773 PMCID: PMC3013252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Popul Nutr ISSN: 1606-0997 Impact factor: 2.000
Reference materials analyzed for arsenic together with collected samples in the present work. For arsenic in urine, both sum of arsenic metabolites and total arsenic are given, as the certified or recommended values are for total arsenic only
| Reference material (certified or recommended values) | Matrix | Obtained arsenic concentrations and time of analyses |
|---|---|---|
| NIST 2670, high level (total As 480±100 μg/L) | Urine | Total As: 522±44 μg/L, n=119 (1997–1999) |
| As metabolites 499/481 μg/L | As metabolites: 494±9, n=33 (1997–2004) | |
| NIST 2670, low level (total As 60 μg/L) | Urine | Total As: 62±3.0 μg/L, n=17 (1997–1999) |
| As metabolites 60/44 μg/L | As metabolites: 60±4, n=10 (1997–1999) | |
| NIST 1643a, (76±7 μg/L) | Water | 78±5.5 μg/L, n=16 (1994) |
| NIST 1643c, (82±1.2 μg/L) | Water | 86±5.5 μg/L, n=20 (1995–1999) |
| NIST 1643d, (56.02±0.73 μg/L) | Water | 56±0.3 μg/L, n=6 (2004) |
| GBW 09101 (590±70 μg/kg) | Hair | 588±22 μg/kg, n=6 (1999–2001) |
*Values reported by Le et al. and Mandal et al. (22, 23)
As=Arsenic
Fig. 1.Obtained concentrations of sum of arsenic metabolites in NIST HL reference urine over the whole study period. Certified concentration of total arsenic is 480±100 μg/L. Reported concentrations of arsenic metabolites are 499 μg/L (22) and 481 μg/L (23)
Concentrations of total arsenic in drinking-water (groundwater) and surface water collected in different regions in the north of Argentina
| Village | Water source | Arsenic concentration (μg/L) |
|---|---|---|
| Puna region | ||
| San Antonio de los Cobres | Piped well-water | 189 |
| Tolar Grande | Piped well-water | 2.5 |
| Olacapato | Piped well-water | 14 |
| St Rosa de los Pastos Grandes | Piped well-water | 31 |
| Chaco Salteño region | ||
| Taco Pozo | Private well/piped well-water (n=2) | 214, 216 |
| Joaquín V. Gonzalez | Piped well-water (n=2) | 5.5, 7.2 |
| Anta | Private wells (n=6) | 187 (110–250) |
| Salta | ||
| Town of Salta | Public water distribution (groundwater) | 0.5 |
| Rosario de Lerma | Public water distribution (groundwater) (n=3) | 0.6, 07, 0.6 |
*Average of all samples 1994–2004 (Table 3);
‡Mean and (range)
As=Arsenic
Concentrations of total arsenic in drinking-water in San Antonio de los Cobres during 1994–2004. Water samples were collected from taps in private homes and from the water source, the natural spring Agua de Castilla
| Sampling time | No. of samples | Arsenic concentration (μg/L) |
|---|---|---|
| April 1994 | 4 | 205±15 (192–217) |
| November 1994 | 2 | 160, 157 |
| 1 | 179 | |
| September 1995 | 2 | 214, 216 |
| May 1996 | 1 | 188 |
| August 1996 | 3 | 162, 200, 218 |
| October 1996 | 1 | 183 |
| November 1997 | 5 | 143±38 (107–195) |
| March 1999 | 3 | 140, 180, 187 |
| 1 | 214 | |
| November 2004 | 8 | 219±7.7 (207–229) |
| Mean | 31 | 186±26 |
*Mean, SD, and (range);
**Agua de Castilla
As=Arsenic
Concentrations of arsenic metabolites in urine (μg/L, adjusted to specific gravity of 1.018 g/mL) of women from the Puna and Chaco regions in Northern Argentina. Data represent median values (range)
| Village | Arsenic metabolites in urine (μg/L) |
|---|---|
| Puna region | |
| San Antonio de los Cobres | |
| n=11 (April 1994) | 288 (121–456) |
| n=15 (November 1997) | 238 (98–325) |
| n=7 (March 1999) | 232 (138–254) |
| n=96 (November 2004) | 301 (54–899) |
| Tolar Grande, n=5 | 15 (10–16) |
| Olacapato, n=5 | 26 (11–44) |
| Santa Rosa de los Pastos | |
| Grandes, n=5 | 55 (36–64) |
| Chaco Salteño region | |
| Taco Pozo, n=12 | 366 (85–574) |
| Joaquín V. Gonzalez, n=5 | 10 (6.0–18) |
| Anta, n=10 | 141 (72–300) |
| Salta | |
| Rosario de Lerma, n=12 | 7.2 (3.0–21) |
Fig. 2.Association between average concentrations of arsenic metabolites in urine in eight villages in Northern Argentina and corresponding concentrations of arsenic in drinking-water
Fig. 3.Individual variation in concentrations of arsenic metabolites in urine in relation to arsenic concentrations in drinking-water
Fig. 4.Correlation between concentrations of arsenic in hair and urine from women in San Antonio de los Cobres, small Puna villages, and Rosario de Lerma
Fig. 5.Correlation between concentrations of arsenic in hair and urine from children in San Antonio de los Cobres and Rosario de Lerma