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Rooney, James P. K.; Michalke, Bernhard; Geoghegan, Grainne; Heverin, Mark; Böse-O’Reilly, Stephan ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0204-3103; Hardiman, Orla und Rakete, Stefan ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4851-513X (2022): Urine concentrations of selected trace metals in a cohort of Irish adults. In: Environmental Science and Pollution Research, Bd. 29, Nr. 50: S. 75356-75364 [PDF, 705kB]

Abstract

Human biomonitoring studies are of increasing importance in regulatory toxicology;however, there is a paucity of human biomonitoring data for the Irish population. In this study, we provide new data for urinary biomarker concentrations of aluminium, arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, mercury, manganese, lead and selenium. One hundred urine samples, collected between 2011 and 2014 from healthy participants of the EuroMOTOR project, were randomly selected. Metal concentrations were measured via ICPMS. Descriptive statistics for each of the metals stratified by gender were performed. There were 58 male and 42 female participants and metals were detectable for all samples. Geometric mean urinary concentrations for each metal in males were as follows: aluminium 8.5 mu g/L, arsenic 8.1 mu g/L, cadmium 0.3 mu g/L, chromium 0.5 mu g/L, copper 5.1 mu g/L, mercury 0.4 mu g/L, manganese 0.3 mu g/L, lead 1.3 mu g/L and selenium 10.8 mu g/L;and in females: aluminium 8.5 mu g/L, arsenic 10.2 mu g/L, cadmium 0.4 mu g/L, chromium 0.6 mu g/L, copper 5.6 mu g/L, mercury 0.3 mu g/L, manganese 0.2 mu g/L, lead 1.6 mu g/L and selenium 13.7 mu g/L. We observed higher geometric mean concentrations in women for arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead and selenium, with equal geometric mean concentrations for aluminium and manganese, leaving only mercury with lower geometric mean concentrations in women. Aluminium, cadmium, chromium, lead and urinary concentrations of metals were slightly elevated compared to European data, while for arsenic, copper, manganese and selenium, Irish levels were lower. Our findings highlight that there are differences in urinary metal concentrations between European populations.

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