| Literature DB >> 34634704 |
Min Jang1, Hyemin Yang1, Huichan Lee1, Kwang Seon Lee2, Joo Yeon Oh2, Hyeonyeol Jeon1, Yong Sik Ok3, Sung Yeon Hwang4, Jeyoung Park4, Dongyeop X Oh5.
Abstract
As human beings have been consistently exposed to bisphenol A (BPA) and bisphenol S (BPS) derived from various products, the intake of BPS/BPA to humans has been extensively studied. However, using conventional biological matrices such as urine, blood, or dissected skin to detect BPS/BPA in the human body system requires longer exposure time to them, hardly defines the pollutant source of the accumulated BPS/BPA, and is often invasive. Herein, our new approach i.e. fingerprint analysis quantitatively confirms the transfer of BPS/BPA from receipts (specific pollution source) to human skin only within receipt-handling of "20 s". When receipts (fingertip region size; ~1 cm2) containing 100-300 μg of BPS or BPA are handled, 20-40 μg fingerprint-1 of BPS or BPA is transferred to human skin (fingertip). This transferred amount of BPS/BPA can still be toxic according to the toxicity test using water fleas. As a visual evidence, a fingerprint map that matches the distribution of the absorbed BPS/BPA is developed using a mass spectrometry imaging tool. This is the first study to analyze fingerprints to determine the incorporation mechanism of emerging pollutants. This study provides an efficient and non-invasive environmental forensic tool to analyze amounts and sources of hazardous substances.Entities:
Keywords: Bisphenol derivatives; Emerging contaminants; Environmental forensics; Fingerprints; Toxicity test of water flea
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34634704 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588