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Journal ArticleDOI

An assessment of lead absorption from soil affected by smelter emissions.

TLDR
The purpose of this study was to assess the oral bioavailability of lead in soil collected from a former smelter site in Sandy, Utah, USA and the ratio of the doses of lead acetate and soil lead that produced the same tissue response provided an index of relative bioavailability.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the oral bioavailability of lead in soil collected from a former smelter site in Sandy, Utah, USA. Sprague-Dawley rats (approximately 4 weeks of age, 5 of each sex in group) were given either soil lead or lead acetate mixed in a purified diet (AIN-93G ™) at four different concentrations for 31 consecutive days. Food consumption measurements were used to compute mean daily lead exposures for the soil lead and lead acetate groups. The lead acetate treatment yielded higher concentrations of lead in the blood and bone than the soil lead treatment. Mean blood lead values ranged from below the detection limit (3 μg dL−1) to 27.25 μg lead dL−1 for the lead acetate groups at dose levels of 0.10–2.91 mg lead kg body weight−1 and from below the detection limit to 8.8 μg lead dL−1 for the soil lead groups at doses of 0.11–3.43 mg lead kg body weight−1. At these same doses, mean bone values ranged from 0.52 to 26.92 μg lead g−1 for the lead acetate groups and from 0.64 to 13.1 μg lead g−1 for the soil lead groups. Relative per cent bioavailability was estimated by modelling the dose-blood concentration curves for the lead acetate treatment and the dosed soil lead treatment, and then comparing doses that produce an equivalent blood lead concentration. The ratio of the doses of lead acetate and soil lead that produced the same tissue response (i.e., concentration) provided an index of relative bioavailability. For lead, the bioavailability of soil lead relative to lead acetate was 41% at a blood concentration of 6 μg lead dL−1.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in evaluating the oral bioavailability of inorganics in soil for use in human health risk assessment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a risk assessment for sites affected by inorganic contaminants based on the estimated oral toxicity of the substances of concern, which are typically based on historical studies in which a soluble salt of the metal was dissolved in water or mixed in food and then ingested by an animal or human.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soil Lead Bioavailability and in Situ Remediation of Lead-Contaminated Soils: A Review

TL;DR: In this article, a review of soil Pb bioavailability and an evaluation of in situ stabilization methods that can be used to reduce the bioavailability of soil lead is presented, where a promising in situ approach involves the amendment of Pb-contaminated soil with phosphorus in various forms or P with other amendments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bioaccessibility of Metals in Soils for Different Liquid to Solid Ratios in Synthetic Gastric Fluid

TL;DR: The bioaccessible fraction of metals in the stomach has been estimated for two soil materials using laboratory synthesized gastric juice using laboratory simulated metal solubilization processes that occur in the human stomach as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

In vitro and in vivo approaches for the measurement of oral bioavailability of lead (Pb) in contaminated soils: a review.

TL;DR: Findings have revealed that fractional bioaccessibility of Pb in urban soils is only 5-10% of total soil Pb, far lower than the 60% as bioavailable as food-Pb presumed by U.S.-EPA (30% absolute bioavailability used in IEUBK model).
Journal ArticleDOI

In Vivo-in Vitro and XANES Spectroscopy Assessments of Lead Bioavailability in Contaminated Periurban Soils

TL;DR: Lead (Pb) bioaccessibility was assessed using 2 in vitro methods in 12 Pb-contaminated soils and compared to relative Pb bioavailability using an in vivo mouse model, suggesting that coexistence of Fe in the intestinal phase plays an important role in reducing PbBioaccessibility and relative bioavailability.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

In situ lead immobilization by apatite

TL;DR: It is hypothesize that Pb was immobilized by dissolution of hydroxyapatite and precipitation of hydroxypyromorphite [Pb 10 (PO 4 ) 6 (OH) 2 ]
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In situ formation of lead phosphates in soils as a method to immobilize lead.

TL;DR: This study demonstrated that the weathering of galena to insoluble lead phosphates in soils at a port facility historically used for shipment of ore concentrates is due to the presence of adequate soil phosphate.
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Development of an in vitro screening test to evaluate the in vivo bioaccessibility of ingested mine-waste lead

TL;DR: In vitro method development tests indicated that H + concentration and Cl - compleration control dissolution of Pb-bearing minerals in the stomach and that both GI tract enzymes and organic acids are necessary to maintain Pb in the soluble form on entering the small intestine.
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Micromineralogy of mine wastes in relation to lead bioavailability, Butte, Montana

TL;DR: In this paper, electron microprobe analysis of soil and waste rock mineralogy helps explain the low blood Pb levels observed in young children living in Butte, MT, where the sulfide/sulfate assemblage consists primarily of galena, anglesite, and lead jarosite, while the oxide/phosphate assembly was principally manganese lead oxide, lead phosphate solid-solution series and lead oxide.
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