| Literature DB >> 35878266 |
Marta Herrero1,2, Neus González1,2, Joaquim Rovira1,2,3, Montse Marquès1,2, José L Domingo1,2, Martí Nadal1,2.
Abstract
Clothes contain a wide range of chemicals, some of them potentially hazardous. Recently, there has been a growing interest in eco-friendly clothing, including the use of organic cotton. However, the process of eco-friendly fabric production does not exclude the use of toxic substances, such as formaldehyde, a known human carcinogen. The present investigation was aimed at determining the presence of formaldehyde in eco-friendly and conventional clothing of pregnant women, babies, and toddlers from the Catalan (Spain) market. The potential effects of washing were also investigated by comparing the reduction of formaldehyde in unwashed and washed clothing. Formaldehyde was detected in 20% of samples, with a mean level of 8.96 mg/kg. Formaldehyde levels were surprisingly higher in eco-friendly than in regular garments (10.4 vs. 8.23 mg/kg). However, these differences were only significant (p < 0.05) for bras (11.6 vs. 7.46 mg/kg) and panties (27.1 vs. 6.38 mg/kg) of pregnant women. Dermal exposure and health risks were assessed for three vulnerable population groups: pregnant women, babies, and toddlers. In general, exposure was higher in babies (up to 1.11 × 10-3 mg/kg/day) than in other groups (2.58 × 10-4 and 4.50 × 10-3 mg/kg/day in pregnant women and toddlers, respectively). However, both non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic risks were below the safety limits (<1 and <10-5, respectively) according to national regulations. Notwithstanding, although formaldehyde levels were below the legal limits (<75 mg/kg) and health risks were within acceptable ranges, clothing may contain other toxic substances in addition to formaldehyde, thus increasing the risks. Finally, since no formaldehyde was detected in washed textile samples, a safe and simple practice for the consumers is to wash clothing before the first use.Entities:
Keywords: children; dermal absorption; formaldehyde; pregnant women; risk assessment; textiles
Year: 2022 PMID: 35878266 PMCID: PMC9318620 DOI: 10.3390/toxics10070361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxics ISSN: 2305-6304
Parameters used to assess dermal exposure.
| Variable | Description | Value | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fcloth | Weight fraction of substance in garments | Cloth specific mg/mg |
|
| dcloth | Clothing grammage | Cloth specific mg/cm2 |
|
| Askin | Pregnancy women t-shirt (trunk + arms) | 8910 cm2 | [ |
| Pregnancy Troussers_Jeans_Leggings (legs) | 5980 cm2 | ||
| Pregnancy Band of Trouser (trunk/2) | 3270 cm2 | ||
| Pregnancy Troussers_Jeans_Leggings + Band (legs + trunk/2) | 9250 cm2 | ||
| Pregnancy Bra (Bosom) | 2594 cm2 | ||
| Pregnancy underwear without brand (genitals and buttocks) | 1469 cm2 | ||
| Pregnancy underwear with brand (genitals and buttocks +trunk/2) | 4739 cm2 | ||
| Baby Pyjamas (Trunk + Arms + Legs + Feet) | 2778 cm2 | ||
| Baby Bodysuits (trunk + arms) | 1795 cm2 | ||
| Baby socks (Feet) | 235 cm2 | ||
| Toddlers Pyjamas (Trunk + arms + legs) | 4355 cm2 | ||
| Underwear (Genitals) | 383 cm2 | ||
| Dresses (Trunk + arms + 1/2legs) | 3665 cm2 | ||
| T-shirt (trunk + arms) | 2975 cm2 | ||
| Trousser/Jeans/leggings (Legs) | 5980 cm2 | ||
| Fcontact | Fraction of contact area for skin | 1 | [ |
| Fmig | Migration fraction from cloth to skin | 0.5% | [ |
| Fpen | Fraction of penetration inside the body | 0.01 | [ |
| Tcontact | Contact duration between skin-textile | 0.33 (8 h/24 h) | Assumed |
| N | Mean number of events per day | 1/d | Assumed |
| BW | Adult Female | 76.9 kg | [ |
| Birth to <12 month | 7.31 kg | [ | |
| 1 < 3 years | 12.5 kg |
Parameters used to assess inhalation exposure.
| Variable | Description | Value | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ci | Air concentration | ||
| Bedroom | 27.3 µg/m3 | [ | |
| Living room | 22.5 µg/m3 | ||
| Outdoor | 1.62 µg/m3 | ||
| Work | 21.8 µg/m3 | ||
| IRi | Inhalation rates | ||
| Pregnant women | 19.2 m3/day | [ | |
| Infants <12 months | 5.40 m3/day | ||
| Toddlers 12–36 months | 8.45 m3/day | ||
| Fi | Time fraction | ||
| Bedroom | 0.36 | [ | |
| Indoor (excl. bedroom) | 0.37 | ||
| Outdoor | 0.10 | ||
| At work | 0.14 | ||
| EF | Exposure frequency | 350 days/year | [ |
| BW | Body weight | ||
| Pregnant women | 76.9 kg | [ | |
| Infants <12 months | 7.31 kg | [ | |
| Toddlers 12–36 months | 12.5 kg |
Free and extractable formaldehyde levels (mg/kg) in the clothing of pregnant women, babies and toddlers purchased from Catalonia (Spain).
| Detection Rate (%) | Mean | SD | Minimum | Maximum | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnant women’s clothes | T-shirts ( | 20 | 8.44 | 4.42 | <12.8 | 18.4 |
| Jeans/leggings ( | 80 | 18.2 | 9.77 | <12.8 | 24.5 | |
| Bras ( | 20 | 7.94 | 3.35 | <12.8 | 15.5 | |
| Panties ( | 40 | 16.7 | 17.0 | <12.8 | 55.7 | |
| Babies clothes | Pyjamas ( | 0 | <12.8 | 0.00 | <12.8 | <12.8 |
| Bodysuits ( | 0 | <12.8 | 0.00 | <12.8 | <12.8 | |
| Socks ( | 10 | 8.19 | 5.72 | <12.8 | 24.5 | |
| Toddlers clothes | Pyjamas ( | 0 | <12.8 | 0.00 | <12.8 | <12.8 |
| Underwear ( | 0 | <12.8 | 0.00 | <12.8 | <12.8 | |
| Dresses ( | 10 | 7.74 | 4.29 | <12.8 | 20.0 | |
| T-shirts ( | 10 | 7.48 | 3.49 | <12.8 | 17.4 | |
| Trousers ( | 40 | 9.87 | 4.65 | <12.8 | 16.4 |
SD: Standard deviation.
Figure 1Formaldehyde concentrations according to a number of factors, including cotton production, OEKO-TEX® Standard 100, painting process, type of fibre, and number of colours. * An asterisk indicates significant differences at p < 0.05. ND: Not detected.
Figure 2Formaldehyde concentrations according to type of cotton in clothes for pregnant women, babies aged <12 months, and toddlers aged 12–36 months. a Not detected in regular cotton. b Not detected in organic cotton. c Not detected in any types of cotton.
Dermal exposure (mg/kg/day) to formaldehyde through clothing.
| Dermal Exposure per Item | Total Exposure | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnant women | T-shirts | 5.23 × 10−5 | 2.58 × 10−4 |
| Jeans/leggings | 1.48 × 10−4 | ||
| Bras | 1.54 × 10−5 | ||
| Panties | 4.23 × 10−5 | ||
| Babies | Pyjamas | 3.07 × 10−4 | 1.11 × 10−3 |
| Bodysuits | 2.92 × 10−4 | ||
| Socks | 5.13 × 10−4 | ||
| Toddlers | Pyjamas | 2.68 × 10−4 | 4.50 × 10−4 * |
| Underwear | 2.99 × 10−5 | ||
| Dresses | 1.14 × 10−4 | ||
| T-shirts | 8.96 × 10−5 | ||
| Trousers | 3.30 × 10−4 |
* Dressed with underwear, T-shirt and trousers. ** Dressed with underwear and dress.
Figure 3Risk assessment of dermal exposure to formaldehyde in the worst-case scenario, for pregnant women (W), babies (B) aged <12 months, and toddlers (T) aged 12–36 months.
Evolution of the concentration of formaldehyde in clothes.
| Country | Year | Number and Type of Clothes | Detection Rate | Formaldehyde Content | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spain | 2022 | 124 samples | 19% | ND–56 mg/kg | This study |
| South Africa | 2019 | 34 socks samples | 0% | 100% ND | [ |
| Colombia | 2018 | 62 samples | 74% | ND–87 mg/kg | [ |
| Europe | 2017 | 4 curtains, 4 pants, 14 T-shirts and 2 shirts | 71% | ND–76 mg/kg | [ |
| European | 2007 | 221 samples (48 water extraction) | 48% | ND in 52%; 30–166 mg/kg in 48% | [ |
| Denmark | 2003 | 10 textiles | 30% | ND in 70%; 35–82 mg/kg in 30% | [ |
| USA | 1998 | 16 fabrics | 50% | ND in 50%; <200 p.p.m in 50% | [ |
ND: not detected.