| Literature DB >> 23173867 |
Elise Deshommes1, Robert Tardif, Marc Edwards, Sébastien Sauvé, Michèle Prévost.
Abstract
In vivo estimations of Pb particle bioavailability are costly and variable, because of the nature of animal assays. The most feasible alternative for increasing the number of investigations carried out on Pb particle bioavailability is in vitro testing. This testing method requires calibration using in vivo data on an adapted animal model, so that the results will be valid for childhood exposure assessment. Also, the test results must be reproducible within and between laboratories. The Relative Bioaccessibility Leaching Procedure, which is calibrated with in vivo data on soils, presents the highest degree of validation and simplicity. This method could be applied to Pb particles, including those in paint and dust, and those in drinking water systems, which although relevant, have been poorly investigated up to now for childhood exposure assessment.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23173867 PMCID: PMC3547711 DOI: 10.1186/1752-153X-6-138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Cent J ISSN: 1752-153X Impact factor: 4.215
Figure 1Calculation of blood Area Under the Curve (AUC). TM – Test Material.
Figure 2Calculation of RBA based on equivalent Internal Dose Metrics (IDM) for (a) blood; and (b) tissues (bones, liver, kidney, etc.). TM – Test Material.
experiments on Pb particles and bioavailability results (2 pages)
| Rats (7–8 wk) | Mine wastes | · Fed | · 12.1±3.6-26.8±4.8 (blood RBA %) | |
| · 30 d | · 4.8±1.9-13.3±2.2 (bone RBA %) | |||
| · 0.12-24 mg Pb/kg bw/d | · 0.6±3.1-13.6±3.1 (liver RBA %) | |||
| Rats (6–7 wk) | Pb oxide, Pb sulfide, Pb ore concentrate | · Fed | · 69-93 (blood RBA %, Pb oxide) | |
| · 30 d | · ND-36 (blood RBA %, Pb sulfide) | |||
| · 0–100 ppm Pb | · ND-10 (blood RBA %, Pb ore) | |||
| Rats (7–8 wk) | Mine wastes | · Fed | · 0.36±1.04-7.32±1.57 (blood ABA %) | |
| · 30 d | · 0.51±0.15-2.25±0.23 (bone ABA %) | |||
| · 5 to 20 ppm Pb | ||||
| Rabbits (12 wk) | Mine wastes | · Fast | · 9±4 % Pb soluble in stomach | |
| · 0.5-36 h | ||||
| · 7.8 mg Pb/kg bw | ||||
| Rats (7–8 wk) | Mine wastes | · Fed | · 2.7±1.5 (% blood RBA) | |
| · 30 d | · 0.40±0.16 (% bone RBA) | |||
| · 0.12 to 24 mg Pb/kg bw/d | · 0.55±0.68 (% liver RBA) | |||
| Rats (4 wk) | Smelter soil | · Fed | · 41 (% blood RBA) | |
| · 31 d | · 20 (% blood ABA) | |||
| · 0.11-3.4 mg Pb/kg bw/d | | |||
| Rats (~ 4 wk) | Soil, Pb sulfide | · Fed | · 0.8-8.7 (soil, % RBA) | |
| · 44 d | · 1.2-5 (Pb sulfide,% RBA) | |||
| · 17.6-127 ppm | | |||
| Swine (40–50 d) | Tacoma smelter soil & slag | · Fast (small dough) | · Mean ABA§ (%, PbAciv): 10 (soil), 4 (slag) | |
| · 0–7 d | ||||
| · 34–567 μg Pb/kg bw (single dose) | ||||
| Swine (8–9 kg) | Berm and residential soils | · Fast (small dough) | · 74-75 (point estimate RBA %‡) | |
| · 15 d | ||||
| · 71–732 μg Pb/kg bw/d | ||||
| Swine | Joplin smelter soil treated or not with 1% phosphate | | · Point estimate RBA (%): 59–67 (not treated) to 38–45 (treated 1% phosphate) | |
| Humans (21–40 yr) | Bunker Hill residential soil | · Fast & Fed | · Fasting state: 26.2±8.1 (% ABA) | |
| · 30 h | · With breakfast meal: 2.52±1.7 (% ABA) | |||
| · 250 μg Pb/70 kg bw | | |||
| Rats (0.18–0.2 kg) | SRM 2710 Montana soil | · Fast | · 0.4-0.9 (% RBA) | |
| · 3 d | ||||
| · 7–8 mg Pb (single dose) | ||||
| Rats (3–4 wk) | Urban soil treated with biosolids (n=9) | · Fed | · RBA not calculated in % | |
| · 35 d | ||||
| · 71–125 mg Pb/kg diet | ||||
| Rats (12 wk) | Joplin soil treated or not with Mn, phosphate, or CRYP (n=15) | · Fed | · Blood RBA%: 34 (not treated); 19–33 (treated) | |
| · 1–6 mg Pb/kg bw/d | · Kidney RBA%: 48 (not treated); 19–39 (treated) | |||
| | · Liver RBA%: 27 (not treated); 19–21 (treated) | |||
| | · Bone RBA%: 34 (not treated); 20–24 (treated) | |||
| Juvenile swine | 2 Omaha smelter soils | · Fast (small dough) | · 83 & 96 (point estimate RBA %) | |
| · 15 d | ||||
| · 75–675 μg Pb/kg bw/d | | |||
| Swine (5–6 wk) | 19 soil or soil-like materials† | · Fast (small dough) | · 1-105 (point estimate RBA %*) | |
| · 15 d | | |||
| · 75–675 μg Pb/kg bw/d | | |||
| Swine (70 d) | 5 soils | · Semi-fed (milk powder after 5 h fast) | · 17-63 (RBA %) | |
| | | | · 28 d | |
| | | | · 0.1-3.2 mg Pb/kg bw/d | |
| Swine (5–6 wk) | Smelter soil HER-2930 | · Fast (small dough) | · 82 (point estimate RBA %) | |
| | | | · 15 d | |
| | | | · 77–686 μg Pb/kg bw/d | |
| Rats (~ 21 d) Micropigs (~ 30 d) | 2 smelter soils | · Fed | · Rats RBA %: 88 (blood), 62 (bone) | |
| | | | · 30 d | · Micropigs RBA %: 81 (blood), 68 (bone) |
| | | | · 50 μg Pb/g diet | |
| Rats (~ 21 d) | 5 soils | · Fed | · 85±48 (blood RBA %) | |
| | | | · 35 d | · 91±12 (bone RBA %) |
| | | | · 6.8-150 μg Pb/g diet | |
| Juvenile swine | 8 small arms range soils | · Fast (small dough) | · 108±18 (point estimate RBA %) | |
| | | | · 15 d | |
| | | | · 75–675 μg Pb/kg bw/d | |
| Swine (28 d) | 15 mining and smelting soils | · Fast (small dough) | · 6-100 (kidney RBA %) | |
| | | | · 14 d | · 8–100 (urine RBA %) |
| | | | · <1 to 8 mg Pb/kg bw/d | · 9–100 (bone RBA %) |
| | | | | · 10–85 (liver RBA %) |
| Swine (6–8 wk) | 5 incinerator and urban soils | · Fast | · 10.1±8.7-19.1±14.9 (blood RBA %) | |
| | | | · 5 d | |
| | | | · 0.1-1.2 mg Pb/kg bw (single dose) | |
| Adult mice | 12 Pb impacted soils from various sources | · Fast | · 10±2.8-89±15.3 (blood RBA %) | |
| | | | · 48 h | |
| · 0.1-1.7 mg Pb (single dose) |
RBA–relative bioavailability; ABA–absolute bioavailability; ND–not determined; §estimates include 0 & 100% in the confidence interval; ‡USEPA and Casteel et al. point estimate [42,43]; #data from the Ruby et al. review [69]; †including soils tested by Schroder et al. [70]; *also available in USEPA [43].
tests design: main factors affecting bioaccessibility results
| +++ | - IVBA ↑ when pH ↓ | - Check the pH increase at the end of the G phase. | [ | |
| +++ | - ↓ IVBA as compared to gastric IVBA | - Adjust intestinal IVBA to Pb salt solubility during the intestinal phase | [ | |
| | | - Major ↓ IVBA from pH 4 to 6 | | |
| | | | - Increase in solubility of bile/pancreatin-Pb complexes at pH 7.5 | |
| | | - Slight ↑ IVBA at pH 7.5 compared to pH 6.0-7.0 | | |
| - | - No impact between 20°C and 37°C | - May be important when enzymes are added | [ | |
| +++ | - Gastric IVBA > Intestinal IVBA | - Adjust intestinal IVBA to Pb salt solubility during the intestinal phase | [ | |
| + | - IVBA ↓ in the range: centrifugation > microfiltration > UF | - No difference between 0.2 and 0.45 μm filtration | [ | |
| + | - Contradictory results (↑ or ↓ IVBA) | - Physiologically based fluids may be important when food is added | [ | |
| | | - Physiologically based fluids do not seem important for the G phase | | |
| | | | - Bile/pancreatin would create soluble complexes with Pb | |
| ++ | - IVBA ↑ when gastric phase time ↑ | - Lower impact on more soluble Pb forms: IVBA plateau reached after 20–30 min | [ | |
| | | - No information on intestinal extraction time effect | | |
| ++ | - Aggressive mixing (Ar gas) ↑ IVBA | - End-over-end agitation adapted to maximize solid/fluid contact, but not too aggressive | [ | |
| +++ | - IVBA ↓ with high S/L > 1/100 | - High S/L ↑ the effect of TM on pH ↑ | [ | |
| | | - No effect between low ratio 1/100 and 1/5000 | - Low ratios (< 1/125) give poorer reproducibility | |
| +++ | - IVBA ↓ with food, except powdered milk | - Effect variable depending on food type | [ | |
| - Fed tests linked to lower recovery rates |
+++ high importance, ++ moderate importance, + light importance, - no importance, based on the studies published to date.
Figure 3Changes in Pb acetate (PbAc, 1-10 mg Pb/L) solubility with pH, during the gastric and intestinal phases. Adapted from [67].
Comparison of bioaccessibility results obtained with the same test materials
| PBET | 67.3 | | [ | |
| PBET | 29±5 to 46±29 | | [ | |
| PBET | | 54-62±1* | [ | |
| | PBET | 76.1±11 | 10.7±2.3 | [ |
| | PBET | | 30-35 | [ |
| | RIVM | 79±4 | 25±1 | [ |
| | RBALP | 75±5 | | [ |
| | UBM | 75 | 27 | [ |
| DIN | | 46±2 | [ | |
| SHIME | | 3±0.3 | | |
| | TIM | | 17±3 | |
| | RIVM | | 11±2 | |
| | SBET | 90±2 | | |
| | PBET | | 10-20 (60 for chicken bile) | |
| | PBET | 85±5 | 13±1 | [ |
| | RBALP | 84±6 | | [ |
| | UBM | 80 | 33 | [ |
| PBET | 75 | | [ | |
| PBET | | 70±11* | [ | |
| | RIVM | 87.6 ± 8.4 | 45.4 ± 4.0 | [ |
| | PBET | | 13±0.8 | [ |
| | DIN | | 13.6±0.6 | |
| | SHIME | | 2.0±0.1 | |
| | RIVM | | 31.8±2.5-47.4±3.2 | |
| | TIM | | 32.5±4.5 | |
| DIN | | 31±3 | [ | |
| | SHIME | | 4±1 | |
| | TIM | | 13±3 | |
| | RIVM | | 66±9 | |
| | SBET | 91±4 | | |
| DIN | | 16±2 | [ | |
| | SHIME | | 1±0.1 | |
| | TIM | | 4±1 | |
| | RIVM | | 29±2 | |
| | SBET | 56±4 | | |
| | IVG | | 20 | [ |
| SBRC | 66.8±2.3 | 62.9±11 | [ |
IVBA–in vitro bioaccessibility;bioaccessible Pb (mg) included Pb leached in G&I phases;RBA on juvenile swine[65];RBA on human[38,86];RBA on juvenile swine[62].
Tests simulating a fasting state.
procedures applied to Pb particles and compared with data for subsequent calibration (2 pages)
| Mine wastes | | 1/10 g.mL-1 | 2 h @ pH 7.0 | · | |
| | | | 2 h @ pH 1.3 Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| | | | | | |
| Mine wastes Residential soils Tailings | | 1/100 g.mL-1 | 4 h @ pH 7.0 | · | |
| | | | 1 h @ pH 2.5 Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| | | | | | |
| | | | | | · Correlation with I phase: R2 = 0.76 |
| 15 soils or soil-like materials (EPA Region VIII) | | 1/111 g.mL-1 | | · | |
| | | | 1 h @ pH 1.5 Pepsin; organic acids; acetic acids; HCl | | |
| | | | | | R2=0.63, n=15, intercept −8.21, slope 0.90, p < 0.001* |
| | | | | | · Extensive QA/QC protocol |
| Urban soil treated with various biosolids (n=9) | | 1/100 g.mL-1 | | · | |
| | | | 1 h @ pH 2.3 Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | | |
| | | | | | |
| Joplin soil treated or not with Mn, P, or CRYP (n=15) | | 1/100 g.mL-1 | 1 h @ pH 6.5 | · | |
| | | | 1 h @ pH 2.0 Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| | | | | | G phase: R2=0.95, intercept 11, slope 0.82 |
| | | | | | I phase: R2=0.77, intercept 12, slope 1.87 |
| 18 soils (EPA Region VIII) | | 1/150 g.mL-1 1 h @ pH 1.8 Pepsin; NaCl; HCl | 1 h @ pH 5.5 Pancreatin; bile; NaHCO3; decanol | · | |
| | | | | | - G (R=0.93) & I (R=0.80) results, with dough |
| | | | | | - G results no dough (R=0.89) |
| | | | | | · Best correlation for G phase with dough: R2=0.86, n=18, intercept 2.97, slope 0.39 |
| | | | | | |
| 5 soils, with or without milk powder | | 1/40 g.mL-1 | 6 h @ pH 7.5 | · Absence of correlation between | |
| | | | 2 h @ pH 2.0 Pepsin; NaCl; HCl | NaHCO3; trypsin; bile; pancreatin; urea; inorganics | |
| | | | | | |
| 11 soils or soil-like material (EPA Region VIII) | 5 min @ pH 6.5 | 1/37.5 or 1/375 g.mL-1 | 2 h @ pH 5.5-6.5 | · | |
| | | | 2 h @ pH 1.0-2.0 | (in)organics, pancreatin, bile, BSA, lipase, CaCl2 | G phase: R2=0.68-0.79, intercept 0, slope 0.79-1.08 |
| | | (in)organics, mucin, uric acid, alpha-amylase | | | |
| | | | | | I phase: R2=0.66-0.81, intercept 0, slope 0.69-1.16 |
| | | | (in)organics, pepsin, mucin, BSA | | |
| 19 soil-like materials from EPA region VIII, | | 1/100 g.mL-1 | | · | |
| | | | 1 h @ pH 1.5 | | |
| | | | Glycine; HCl | | |
| | | | | | · Extensive QA/QC protocol and statistical analyses |
| | | | | | · Precision 7% within samples, and 4-6% within laboratories (round robin testing) |
| 8 small arms range soils | | 1/100 g.mL-1 1 h @ pH 1.5 | | · | |
| | | | Glycine; HCl | | |
| 14 mining and smelting soils | 5 min @ pH 6.5 | 1/37.5 g.mL-1 | 4 h @ pH 5.8-6.8 | · | |
| | | | | (in)organics, pancreatin, bile, BSA, lipase, CaCl2 | |
| | | | | | G phase: R2=0.93, intercept 1.10, slope 1.86, p < 0.01 |
| | | (in)organics, mucin, uric acid, alpha-amylase | | | |
| | | | | | I phase: R2=0.89, intercept 1.09, slope 1.09, p < 0.01 |
| | | | (in)organics, pepsin, mucin, BSA | | |
| 5 incinerator & urban soils; 5 soils from Marschner | | 1/100 g.mL-1 1 h @ pH 1.5 Glycine, HCl | 4 h @ pH 6.5NaOH, pancreatin, bile | · | |
| | | | | | R2=0.47, intercept 29.5, slope 0.42 (soils from Marschner et al., 2006 study) |
| 12 soils (mining, composite, phosphate-treated), 1 dust | 5 min @ pH 6.5 (in)organics, mucin, uric acid, alpha-amylase | 1/100 g.mL-1 2 h @ pH 1.2-1.4 | 4 h @ pH 6.3±0.5 (in)organics, pancreatin, bile, BSA, lipase, CaCl2 | · | |
| | | | (in)organics, pepsin, mucin, BSA | | |
| | | | | | G phase: R2=0.61, slope 0.78, median RSD 4% within samples, 33% within laboratories |
| | | | | | I phase: R2=0.57, slope 0.38, median RSD 15% within samples, 81% within laboratories |
| 12 soils impacted from a variety of Pb sources | | 1/100 g.mL-1 1 h @ pH 1.5 Glycine, HCl | · | ||
| | | | | | R2=0.78, intercept 30.207, slope 0.69 |
| 12 soils impacted from a variety of Pb sources | | 1/100 g.mL-1 1 h @ pH 1.5 Glycine, HCl | 4 h @ pH 6.5 NaOH, pancreatin, bile | · | |
| R2=0.88, intercept −7.02, slope 1.06 (SBRC, I phase results) |
IVBA–in vitro bioaccessibility; RBA–relative bioavailability; G–gastric; I–intestinal; RSD–relative standard deviation; *relationship with corrected EPA in vivo data from [84]; †in vitro-in vivo relationship not performed with EPA corrected data (in vivo bioavailability or bulk Pb concentrations).
Examples of variants of non-physiologically-based procedures (not calibrated) applied to Pb particles
| | | Filtration 0.5 μm | 1/167 | 24 h, pH 2.0 | HCl | | | |
| Stirred-flow reactor | 24°C | Filtration 0.22 μm | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 1.0 to 3.0 | HCl, ammonium acetate | | | |
| Horizontal shaker | 24°C | Centrifugation (400 RCF; 10 min) | 1/200 | 1 h, pH 1.0 | HCl | | | |
| Inversion by hand 5 times at t = 1h | Ambient | Centrifugation (2,000 rpm; 2 min) | 1/100 | 2 h, pH 1.2 | HCl | | | |
| Rotation 30 rpm | 37°C | Filtration 0.2 μm | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 2–2.5 | HCl | | | |
| End-over-end 30 rpm, at 20 min intervals, for 20 min | 35-39°C | Decantation, filtration | 1/22 | 160 ±10 min, pH 6.0 to 2.0 | HCl, acetic acid | | | |
| Rotation 30 rpm | 37°C | Filtration 0.2 μm | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 2.0 | HCl | | | |
| Continuous stirring | 37°C | Filtration 0.45 μm | 1/160 | 1 h, pH 2.0 | HCl | 5 h, pH 7.0 | | |
| End-over-end,30 rpm | 37°C | Decantation, filtration 0.45 μm | 1/40 and 1/100 | 1 h, pH 1.5 to 4.0 | HCl, glycine | 3 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3 | |
| Variable speed mixer (150 rpm); 2 mL/min Ar | 37°C | Filtration 0.45 μm | 1/167 | 2 h, pH 1.8 | HCl | 4 h, pH 7.0 | NaOH | |
| | Ambient | | 1/100 | Overnight | HCl, pepsin | | | |
| Orbital, 100 rpm | 37°C | Centrifugation (5,000 rpm; 20 min) | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 1.5 | HCl, glycine OR HCl, pepsin, NaCl | 2 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3 | |
| Ultrasonication | 37°C | Filtration 0.45 μm | | 1 h, pH 1.5 | HCl , 0.75-1.4% diluted | | | |
| 37.5°C | Centrifugation (5,000 g, ≤ 10 min) | 1/2000 | 2 h, pH 1.5 | HCl | ||||
Examples of variants of physiologically based procedures (not calibrated) applied to Pb particles (2 pages)
| | Centrifugation, filtration 0.2 μm | | | | 4 h, pH 2.0 | NaCl; pepsin; HCl | 18 h, pH 7.5 | NaHCO3; NaCl; bile; pancreatin; α-amylase | |
| Stir bar | | | | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 2.5 | Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | 2 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| Wrist action shaker | Centrifugation (2,100 g; 25 min) | | | 1/10 | 2 h, pH 1.3 | Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | 2 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| Shaking water bath | Centrifugation (1,380 g; 10 min) | | | 1/100 to 1/5000 | 2 h | NaCl; pepsin; HCl | | | |
| Water bath, 90 cyc/min | Centrifugation (906 g; 10 min), filtration 0.45 μm | 5 s, pH 5.5 | Mucin; urea; KCl; NaCl; Na2HPO4; CaCl2.4H2O | 1/2160 | 2 h | NaCl; pepsin; HCl | 2 h | NaHCO3 | |
| Wrist action shaker | Filtration 0.45 μm | | | 1/10 | 2 h, pH 1.3 to 3.0 | Organic acids; HCl; with(out) pepsin | 16 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3 with(out) bile & pancreatin | |
| Bath set, 90 cyc/min | Centrifugation (200 g; 20 min) & (906 g; 15 min); HNO3, 48 h; filtration 0.45 μm | | Mucin; urea; CaCl2.H2O; NaCl; KCl; Na2HPO4 | 1/2160 | 2 h, pH 1.4 | Pepsin; NaCl; HCl | 4 h, pH 6.5 | NaHCO3 | |
| Agitator, 200 rpm | Centrifugation (7,000 g; 10 min) | | | 1/50 | 2 h, pH 2.0 | HCl; [pepsin; mucin]* | 6 h, pH 7.5 | Phosphate buffer; [bile; trypsin; pancreatin]* | |
| Stirring, 150 rpm | Centrifugation (7,000 g; 10 min) | | | 1/2.5 to 1/40 | 3 h, pH 2.0 (fast) or 4.0 (fed) | Nutrilon plus; pectin; mucin; cellobiose; proteose peptone; starch; glucose | 5 h, pH 6.5 | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| Peristaltic | Ultrafiltration | 5 min, pH 5.0 | | | Fast: 40 min, pH 4.5 to 1.8 | HCl; lipase; pepsin* 0.5 mL/min | Fast: 5.3 h, pH 6.5 to 7.2 | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile* 1 mL/min | |
| Fed: 4.5 h, pH 6.5 to 7.2 | |||||||||
| Fed: 1.5 h, pH 5.0 to 2.0 | |||||||||
| Water bath, 90 rpm | Filtration 0.45 μm | | Mucin; urea; KH2PO4; CaCl2.H2O; NaCl, KCl | 1/400 | 2 h, pH 1.4 | NaCl; pepsin; HCl | 2 h, pH 6.5 | NaHCO3 | |
| Ar | Centrifugation (10,000 g; 15 min), filtration 0.22 μm | | | 1/100 | 1 h pH 1.3 (fast) to 4 (fed) | Pepsin; HCl; organic acids | 3 h pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; bile; pancreatin | |
| | Centrifugation (2,100 g; 25 min) | | | 1/38-1/100 | 1 h pH 1.1 or 2.5 | Pepsin; organic acids; HCl | 4 h, pH 5.5 or 7.0 | NaHCO3; pancreatin; bile | |
| Gentle mixing | No separation | | | 1/16,667 | 3 h, pH 1.2 | NaCl; pepsin; HCl | | | |
| End-over-end | Centrifugation (2,100 g;10 min) | | | 1/200 | 2 h, pH 2.5 | Pepsin; HCl; Na malate & citrate; lactic & acetic acids | 4 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; bile; pancreatin | |
| Water rotator set | Filtration 0.45 μm | | | 1/100 | 1 h pH 2.5 | Pepsin; HCl; Na citrate & malate; lactate, acetate | 4 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; bile; pancreatin | |
| Slow orbital + Ar flux | Centrifugation (5,000 rpm; 20 min) | | | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 1.7 | Pepsin; HCl; citric, malic, acetic, & lactic acids | 2 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; bile; pancreatin | |
| Constant, lateral | Centrifugation (2,000 g; 10 min) | | | 1/100-1/143 | 1 h, pH 2.5 | Pepsin; HCl; Na malate, citrate; lactic & acetic acids | 4 h, pH 7.0 | NaHCO3; bile; pancreatin | |
| Orbital, 150 rpm | 1/100 | 1 h, pH 1.5 | Pepsin; HCl; Na citrate; malic & lactic acids | 3.5 h, pH 7.0 | Pancreatin, NaHCO3 | ||||
Main bioaccessibility results for materials tested using an procedure calibrated with data
| Flanders soil | 91±4 | [ |
| Oker 11 soil | 56±4 | |
| 47 Omaha community smelter soils, US | 68-69 (average) | |
| HER-2930 smelter soil, US | 69±1.5 (using Dr Drexler’s Pb levels) | |
| | 85±1.1 (using EPA’s average bulk Pb levels) | |
| 17 residential soils, tailings, and slags from mining waste sites, US | 14±1.7 to 90±3.1 | |
| 1 NIST paint | 75±3.8 | |
| 1 Galena | 6±2.3 | |
| 8 shooting range soils, US | 83±1 to 100±3 | |
| 20 soils from the N-S transect, US (agricultural, grazing land, open range, forested land, residential, desert) | 3.7 to 39 | |
| 70 samples of tap water particles | 1.5 to 100 | |
| 9 soils from mining sites* | 3.1±0.1 to 99.3±14.3 | [ |
| 1 NIST paint* + soil | 86.2 ± 2.3 | |
| 1 Galena* | 1.7 ± 0.2 | |
| 15 mining soils, France | 9-75 (Intestinal) | [ |
| 10 smelting soils, France | 34-90 (Intestinal) | |
| 27 urban topsoils, France | 11-63 (Intestinal) | |
| 12 soils (mining, composite, phosphate-treated), 1 dust, from various studies (European and North American) | 0.6±0.1 to 112.8±18.5 (Gastric) | |
| | 0.1±0.1 to 89.5±91.3 (Intestinal) | |
| 2 urban residential soils, Australia | 20.0±4.0 to 26.1±6.5 | [ |
| 3 domestic incinerator soils, Australia | 11.7±2.8 to 22.5±5.0 | |
| | 3.2±2.6 to 8.5±0.6 | |
| Brushal, Carl-1, Hamburg, and Oker-11 soils§ | 30.7±6.1 to 62.9±11.0 | |
| 9 shooting range soils, Australia | 21.3-102.6 | |
| | 59±3.7 to 92±9.0 (3 soils) | |
| 5 historical fill soils, Australia | 5.5-26.1 (4 soils) | |
| | 10.7±0.7 to 16.6±1.1 (2 soils) | |
| 13 mining/smelting soils, Australia | 11.6-82.5 | |
| | 31±18.4 to 74±17.3 (3 soils) | |
| 1 gasworks, Australia | 27.2 | |
| | 27±1.6 | |
| 1 geogenic, Australia | 12.5 |
Same test materials as in RBALP studies, 0.06 g;soils tested by Marschner et al.[62];Smith, et al.[68].