Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Soil contamination, dermal absorption estimates

Okrent and Xing (1993) estimated the lifetime cancer risk to a future resident at a hazardous waste disposal site after loss of institutional control. The assumed exposure pathways involve consumption of contaminated fruits and vegetables, ingestion of contaminated soil, and dermal absorption. The slope factors for each chemical that induces stochastic effects were obtained from the IRIS (1988) database and, thus, represent upper bounds (UCLs). The exposure duration was assumed to be 70 y. Based on these assumptions, the estimated lifetime cancer risk was 0.3, due almost entirely to arsenic. If the risk were reduced by a factor of 10, based on the assumption that UCLs of slope factors for chemicals that induce stochastic effects should be reduced by this amount in evaluating waste for classification as low-hazard (see Section 7.1.7.1), the estimated risk would be reduced to 0.03. Either of these results is greater than the assumed limit on acceptable risk of 10 3 (see Table 7.1). Thus, based on this analysis, the waste would be classified as high-hazard in the absence of perpetual institutional control to preclude permanent occupancy of a disposal site. [Pg.346]

As an alternative to the assumption of a one-time exposure for 1,000 h at the time of facility closure, permanent occupancy of a disposal site following loss of institutional control could be assumed (see Section 7.1.3.4). The assumption of chronic lifetime exposure would affect the analysis for hazardous chemicals that induce deterministic effects only if estimated intakes due to additional pathways, such as consumption of contaminated vegetables or other foodstuffs produced on the site, were significant. Based on the results for lead in Table 7.8, an intake rate from additional pathways of about 50 percent of the assumed intake rate by soil ingestion, inhalation, and dermal absorption would be sufficient to increase the deterministic risk index above unity. The importance of additional pathways was not investigated in this analysis, but they clearly would warrant consideration. The increase in exposure time during permanent occupancy does not otherwise affect the analysis for chemicals that induce deterministic effects, provided RfDs are appropriate for chronic exposure, because chronic RfDs incorporate an assumption that the levels of contaminants in body organs relative to the intake rate (dose) are at steady state. [Pg.345]

They dosed rats dermally with laboratory contaminated soil and observed that as the dose Increased, the liver concentration of TCDD Increased from 0.05 to 2.2%. The authors did not estimate a value for dermal bioavailablllty. On the basis of this study, Kimbrough and co-workers estimated a dermal bioavailablllty of 1% for humans (1). The use of a 1% dermal absorption factor (bioavailablllty) almost surely overestimates the actual uptake of TCDD on soil through human skin since Investigators In the dermal field generally agree that rodent skin Is approximately 10 times more permeable than human skin. As discussed In the next section, dermal bioavailablllty (like oral bioavailablllty) Is also likely to decrease with the "age of the soil. (41.42)... [Pg.187]


See other pages where Soil contamination, dermal absorption estimates is mentioned: [Pg.578]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.525]    [Pg.525]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.2079]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.146 ]




SEARCH



Dermal

Dermal contamination

Soil contaminant

Soil contamination

© 2024 chempedia.info