| Literature DB >> 34689297 |
Letícia Rocha Gonçalves1, Matheus Mantuanelli Roberto2, Ana Paula Andrade Braga3, Gabriel Bertoletti Barozzi3, Giovanna Segati Canizela3, Letícia de Souza Gigeck3, Letícia Rosa de Souza3, Maria Aparecida Marin-Morales4.
Abstract
Cemetery leachate generated by the process of cadaveric decomposition is a significant contaminant of several matrices in the cemetery environment (soil, groundwater, and surface water). The biogenic amines cadaverine and putrescine stand out among the cemetery leachate contaminants, since they are potentially carcinogenic compounds. This review article presents a discussion of possible environmental impacts caused by the increase in deaths resulting from COVID-19 as its central theme. The study also aims to demonstrate the importance of considering, in this context, some climatic factors that can alter both the time of bodily decomposition and the longevity of the virus in the environment. Additionally, some evidence for the transmission of the virus to health professionals and family members after the patient's death and environmental contamination after the burial of the bodies will also be presented. Several sources were consulted, such as scientific electronic databases (NCBI), publications by government agencies (e.g., ARPEN, Brazil) and internationally recognized health and environmental agencies (e.g., WHO, OurWorldInData.org), as well as information published on reliable websites available for free (e.g., CNN) and scientific journals related to the topic. The data from this study sounds the alarm on the fact that an increase in the number of deaths from the complications of COVID-19 has generated serious environmental problems, resulting from Cemetery leachate.Entities:
Keywords: Biogenic amines; COVID-19; Cadaverine; Cemetery leachate; Pollution from cemeteries; Putrescine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34689297 PMCID: PMC8542190 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-17098-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223
Number of confirmed deaths from COVID-19 in the 5 continents, registered from March 16 (2020) to January 20 (2021)
| Region | COVID-19 deaths | Death proportion |
|---|---|---|
| America | 984,625 | 47.46% |
| Europe | 646,760 | 31.17% |
| Asia | 360,646 | 17.38% |
| Africa | 81,756 | 3.94% |
| Oceania | 945 | 0.05% |
Source: European CDC—Situation Update Worldwide—OurWorldInData.org/coronavirus (Roser et al. 2021)
Total confirmed cases of COVID-19 and case fatality rate of countries ranked according to total deaths registered from March 16 (2020) to January 20 (2021)
| Total deaths | Total cases | Case fatality rate | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 407,565 | United States | 27,690,000 | Mexico | 8.5% | |||
| Brazil | 212,831 | India | 10,930,000 | Iran | 4.2% | |||
| India | 152,869 | Brazil | 9,870,000 | Peru | 3.6% | |||
| Mexico | 144,371 | United Kingdom | 4,060,000 | Italy | 3.5% | |||
| United Kingdom | 93,469 | Russia | 4,040,000 | Belgium | 3.0% | |||
| Italy | 83,681 | France | 3,530,000 | Indonesia | 2.9% | |||
| France | 71,792 | Spain | 3,090,000 | South Africa | 2.8% | |||
| Russia | 66,214 | Italy | 2,730,000 | United Kingdom | 2.7% | |||
| Iran | 57,057 | Turkey | 2,590,000 | Chile | 2.6% | |||
| Spain | 54,637 | Germany | 2,350,000 | Colombia | 2.5% | |||
| Germany | 50,010 | Colombia | 2,200,000 | Canada | 2.5% | |||
| Colombia | 49,792 | Argentina | 2,030,000 | Argentina | 2.5% | |||
| Argentina | 46,216 | Mexico | 2,000,000 | Romania | 2.5% | |||
| Peru | 39,044 | Poland | 1,590,000 | Brazil | 2.5% | |||
| South Africa | 38,854 | Iran | 1,530,000 | Germany | 2.4% | |||
| Poland | 34,141 | South Africa | 1,490,000 | France | 2.4% | |||
| Indonesia | 26,857 | Ukraine | 1,320,000 | Poland | 2.4% | |||
| Turkey | 24,487 | Peru | 1,240,000 | Spain | 2.3% | |||
| Ukraine | 22,264 | Indonesia | 1,220,000 | Russia | 1.8% | |||
| Belgium | 20,572 | Czechia | 1,090,000 | Ukraine | 1.8% | |||
| Canada | 18,567 | Canada | 832,375 | United States | 1.7% | |||
| Chile | 17,594 | Portugal | 787,059 | Czechia | 1.6% | |||
| Romania | 17,485 | Chile | 779,541 | Portugal | 1.6% | |||
| Czechia | 14,820 | Romania | 763,294 | India | 1.4% | |||
| Portugal | 9,465 | Belgium | 739,488 | Turkey | 1.0% | |||
Source: European CDC—Situation Update Worldwide—OurWorldInData.org/coronavirus (Roser et al. 2021)
Number of deaths confirmed from COVID-19 in Latin American countries, registered from March 16 (2020) to January 20 (2021)
| Country | COVID-19 deaths | Confirmed cases | Mortality rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | 212,831 | 8,640,000 | 2.5% |
| Mexico | 144,371 | 1,690,000 | 8.5% |
| Colombia | 49,792 | 1,960,000 | 2.5% |
| Argentina | 46,216 | 1,830,000 | 2.5% |
| Peru | 39,044 | 1,070,000 | 3.6% |
| Chile | 17,594 | 680,740 | 2.6% |
| Ecuador | 14,437 | 234,315 | 6.2% |
| Bolivia | 9,764 | 193,745 | 5.0% |
| Guatemala | 5,343 | 151,324 | 3.5% |
| Honduras | 3,406 | 136,989 | 2.5% |
| Paraguay | 2,556 | 124,447 | 2.0% |
| El Salvador | 1,521 | 51,437 | 3.0% |
Only countries with > 1,000 deaths and with > 2.0% of mortality rate are listed. Source: European CDC—Situation Update Worldwide—OurWorldInData.org/coronavirus (Roser et al. 2021)
Deaths related to respiratory diseases, recorded from March 16 to December 31, for the years 2019 and 2020
| Death cause | Year | Variation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other (not respiratory-related cause) | 532,718.0 | 556,648.0 | 4.49% |
| Respiratory insufficiency | 81,592.0 | 79,069.0 | -3.09% |
| Pneumonia | 185,229.0 | 138,688.0 | -25.13% |
| Sepsis | 140,194.0 | 126,866.0 | -9.51% |
| Undetermined | 5,705.0 | 8,109.0 | 42.14% |
| SARS | 1,265.0 | 16,279.0 | 1,186.88% |
| COVID-19 | 0.0 | 195,598.0 | - |
SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019. Source: Central de Informações do Registro Civil—CRC Nacional, Brazil (Arpen 2021)
Deaths related to respiratory and cardiac diseases, recorded from March 16 to December 31, for the years 2019 and 2020
| Cause of death | Year | Variation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other (not cardiac-related cause) | 368,694.0 | 375,973.0 | 1.97% |
| Respiratory insufficiency | 69,251.0 | 64,752.0 | -6.50% |
| Pneumonia | 159,500.0 | 117,810.0 | -26.14% |
| Sepsis | 123,319.0 | 110,791.0 | -10.16% |
| Undetermined | 5,516.0 | 7,558.0 | 37.02% |
| SARS | 1,265.0 | 16,279.0 | 1186.88% |
| Stroke | 80,831.0 | 80,715.0 | -0.14% |
| Heart Attack | 80,497.0 | 73,954.0 | -8.13% |
| Unspecific cardiovascular causes | 57,830.0 | 77,827.0 | 34.58% |
| COVID-19 | 0.0 | 195,598.0 | - |
SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019. Source: Central de Informações do Registro Civil—CRC Nacional, Brazil (Arpen 2021)
Deaths cited in each of the Brazilian states, from March 16 to December 31, for the years 2019 and 2020
| Brazilian states | COVID-19 deaths | Total deaths per year | Difference 2019–2020 | Variation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acre | 805.0 | 2,882.0 | 3,515.0 | 633.0 | 21.96% |
| Alagoas | 2,377.0 | 13,547.0 | 15,573.0 | 2,026.0 | 14.96% |
| Amapá | 805.0 | 1,984.0 | 2,373.0 | 389.0 | 19.61% |
| Amazonas | 2,974.0 | 10,431.0 | 14,955.0 | 4,524.0 | 43.37% |
| Bahia | 8,790.0 | 54,916.0 | 65,857.0 | 10,941.0 | 19.92% |
| Ceará | 9,850.0 | 31,407.0 | 43,419.0 | 12,012.0 | 38.25% |
| Distrito Federal | 3,971.0 | 11,405.0 | 14,786.0 | 3,381.0 | 29.64% |
| Espírito Santo | 5,397.0 | 18,799.0 | 22,877.0 | 4,078.0 | 21.69% |
| Goiás | 7,250.0 | 24,579.0 | 31,121.0 | 6,542.0 | 26.62% |
| Maranhão | 2,778.0 | 15,166.0 | 20,774.0 | 5,608.0 | 36.98% |
| Mato Grosso | 3,162.0 | 11,009.0 | 14,676.0 | 3,667.0 | 33.31% |
| Mato Grosso do Sul | 2,438.0 | 12,523.0 | 14,535.0 | 2,012.0 | 16.07% |
| Minas Gerais | 14,443.0 | 97,034.0 | 114,389.0 | 17,355.0 | 17.89% |
| Pará | 5,464.0 | 18,687.0 | 24,924.0 | 6,237.0 | 33.38% |
| Paraíba | 3,100.0 | 20,293.0 | 22,436.0 | 2,143.0 | 10.56% |
| Paraná | 9,907.0 | 52,960.0 | 58,483.0 | 5,523.0 | 10.43% |
| Pernambuco | 7,747.0 | 47,545.0 | 56,808.0 | 9,263.0 | 19.48% |
| Piauí | 1,687.0 | 10,242.0 | 10,789.0 | 547.0 | 5.34% |
| Rio de Janeiro | 28,409.0 | 111,674.0 | 137,554.0 | 25,880.0 | 23.17% |
| Rio Grande do Norte | 2,308.0 | 12,671.0 | 14,255.0 | 1,584.0 | 12.50% |
| Rio Grande do Sul | 9,387.0 | 68,960.0 | 71,929.0 | 2,969.0 | 4.31% |
| Rondônia | 1,493.0 | 5,666.0 | 7,011.0 | 1,345.0 | 23.74% |
| Roraima | 684.0 | 1,827.0 | 2,291.0 | 464.0 | 25.40% |
| Santa Catarina | 5,469.0 | 31,383.0 | 35,705.0 | 4,322.0 | 13.77% |
| São Paulo | 51,944.0 | 246,017.0 | 285,841.0 | 39,824.0 | 16.19% |
| Sergipe | 2,123.0 | 8,993.0 | 10,469.0 | 1,476.0 | 16.41% |
| Tocantins | 890.0 | 4,122.0 | 4,828.0 | 706.0 | 17.13% |
Source: Central de Informações do Registro Civil—CRC Nacional, Brazil (Arpen 2021)
Deaths recorded in each Brazilian geographic region, from March 16 to September 15, for the years 2019 and 2020
| Region | Deaths | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North | 45,599.0 | 46,782.0 | 13,115.0 | 59,897.0 | 31.36% |
| Northeast | 214,780.0 | 219,620.0 | 40,760.0 | 260,380.0 | 21.23% |
| Midwest | 59,516.0 | 58,297.0 | 16,821.0 | 75,118.0 | 26.21% |
| Southeast | 473,524.0 | 460,468.0 | 100,193.0 | 560,661.0 | 18.40% |
| South | 153,303.0 | 141,354.0 | 24,763.0 | 166,117.0 | 8.36% |
Source: Central de Informações do Registro Civil—CRC Nacional, Brazil (Arpen 2021)