| Literature DB >> 26364641 |
Lori Copan1, Jeff Fowles2, Tracy Barreau3, Nancy McGee4.
Abstract
Inorganic mercury, in the form of mercurous chloride, or calomel, is intentionally added to some cosmetic products sold through informal channels in Mexico and the US for skin lightening and acne treatment. These products have led to multiple cases of mercury poisoning but few investigations have addressed the contamination of cream users' homes. We report on several cases of mercury poisoning among three Mexican-American families in California from use of mercury-containing skin creams. Each case resulted in widespread household contamination and secondary contamination of family members. Urine mercury levels in cream users ranged from 37 to 482 µg/g creatinine and in non-users from non-detectable to 107 µg/g creatinine. Air concentrations of up to 8 µg/m³ of mercury within homes exceeded the USEPA/ATSDR health-based guidance and action level of <1.0 μg/m³. Mercury contamination of cream users' homes presented a multi-pathway exposure environment to residents. Homes required extensive decontamination, including disposal of most household items, to achieve acceptable air levels. The acceptable air levels used were not designed to consider multi-pathway exposure scenarios. These findings support that the calomel is able to change valence form to elemental mercury and volatilize once exposed to the skin or surfaces in the indoor environment.Entities:
Keywords: calomel; inorganic mercury poisoning; mercurous chloride; mercury health-based guidance values; mercury toxicity children; residential mercury contamination; skin lightening cream
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26364641 PMCID: PMC4586653 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120910943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Cases in three family units, with individual urinary mercury levels and mercury cream concentrations.
| Cream User | Ages | Sex | Hg Urine (µg/g cr.) | Frequency of Use | Cream Hg Level (ppm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (index) | 20 mos | F | 52 | none | ||
| Y | 35 | F | 21 | unknown | 28,000–38,000 a | |
| N | 32 | M | 2.5 | none | ||
| N | 64 | F | 6 | none | ||
| Y (index) | 17 | M | 208 | Twice daily × 6wks | 96,000–210,000 a | |
| N | 4 | M | 31 | none | ||
| N | ? | F | 16 | - | ||
| N | 2 | F | 16 | none | ||
| N | 11 | M | 14 | none | ||
| Y | 33 | M | 14 | Infrequent | 96,000–210,000 | |
| N | 10 | F | 13 | none | ||
| N | 9 | M | 12 | none | ||
| N | 6 mos | F | 10 | - | ||
| N | 34 | F | 10 | none | ||
| N | 28 | M | 6 | none | ||
| Y (index) | 39 | F | 482 | Twice daily × 4 yrs | 56,000 b | |
| Y | 39 | M | 132 | At bedtime | 56,000 | |
| N | 4 | F | 107 | none | ||
| N | 8 | M | 21 | none | ||
| N | 14 | F | ND | none |
Note: cr. = creatinine; a Method described by Gordon A Vrdoljak, Peter T Palmer, Richard Jacobs, Bahman Moezzi, Abstracts, 248th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, San Francisco, CA, USA, 10–14 August 2014; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, USA, 2014; ACS ANYL 302; b Mercury concentrations were measured using the method for mercury by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (SW-846 EPA Method 6020A); ** ND = not detected; limit of quantification = 0.5 µg/g cr.
Summary of mercury concentration in creams and urine mercury levels in three family units.
| Family | Geometric Mean (GSD) or Single Values of Hg in Urine (µg/g cr.) | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Frequent user (n = 1) | 21 | n.a. |
| Non-user (n = 3) | 9 (28) | 2.5–52 |
| Frequent user (n = 1) | 208 | n.a. |
| Infrequent user (n = 1) | 14 | n.a. |
| Non-user (n = 9) | 13 (7) | 6–31 |
| Frequent user (n = 2) | 252 | 132–482 |
| Non-user (n = 3) | 18 (56) | ND-107 |
| Frequent user (n = 4) | 129 (197) | 37–482 |
| Infrequent user (n = 1) | 14 | 14 |
| Non-user (n = 15) | 13 (27) | ND-107 |
Note: cr. = creatinine; ND = not detected; limit of quantification = 0.5 µg/g cr. Non-detected values were assigned a value of 0.25 µg/g cr. for the purpose of calculating the geometric mean. n.a. = not applicable.
Health-Based Risk and Action Levels for Elemental Mercury in air.
| Health-Based Risk Air levels—Elemental Hg | Value (µg/m3) |
|---|---|
| Evacuation Level (ATSDR) | 10 |
| Action Level (ATSDR) | 1.0 |
| Acute 1hr REL (CalEPA OEHHA) | 0.6 |
| CA 8hr REL (CalEPA OEHHA) | 0.06 |
| Intermediate MRL (ATSDR) | 0.2 |
| Chronic RfC (USEPA) | 0.3 |
| CA Chronic REL (CalEPA OEHHA) | 0.03 |
Note: RfC = Reference Exposure Concentration; Intermediate MRL = Minimum Risk Level (exposure duration 15–364 days); REL = Reference Exposure Level (continuous exposure up to a lifetime).
Range of mercury vapor (Hg) levels in three households.
| Location or Items | Hg Vapor Range a in Homes (µg/m3) |
|---|---|
| Bedroom Breathing Zones | 0.50–8.0 |
| Bedding | 1–200 b |
| Clean Clothing | 0.3–20 |
| Dirty Clothing | 17–200 |
| Washers | 6–11 |
| Dryers | 0.1–1.0 |
| User’s Hands | 6–230 |
| Jars of Cream | 12–999 c |
| Bagged Personal Items | 1.7–127 |
Note: a All measurements were taken with either the Jerome J405 Mercury Vapor Analyzer, the Lumex RA-915 +, or the Lumex® RA-915 Light; b Maximum limit of detection for the Lumex® RA-915 Light. Actual mercury vapor levels are presumably higher; c 999 µg/m3 is the maximum limit of detection for the Jerome J405. Actual mercury vapor levels were presumably higher.