SKIN PERMEATION AND CUTANEOUS HYPERSENSITIVITY AS A BASIS FOR MAKING RISK ASSESSMENTS OF CHROMIUM AS A SOIL CONTAMINANT

被引:29
作者
BAGDON, RE
HAZEN, RE
机构
[1] UNIV MED & DENT NEW JERSEY,ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON MED SCH,DEPT ENVIRONM & COMMUNITY MED,PISCATAWAY,NJ 08854
[2] NEW JERSEY DEPT ENVIRONM PROTECT,DIV SCI & RES,BUR RISK ASSESSMENT,TRENTON,NJ 08625
关键词
D O I
10.2307/3431146
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
A literature review of experimental and human exposure studies of skin permeation and cutaneous hypersensitivity reactions evoked by chromium was carried out to provide a basis for making a risk assessment of chromium as a soil contaminant. In vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that 1 to 4% of the applied dose of hexavalent and trivalent chromium to guinea pig skin penetrated skin within 5 to 24 hr after application. Ultrastructural investigations showed that hexavalent chromium localized intracellularly and extracellularly in the upper layers of guinea pig epidermis. Only minute quantities of hexavalent chromium are required to elicit a positive hypersensitivity reaction in susceptible individuals; using a patch dose of 20-mu-g, only 2-mu-g were required to evoke a positive skin reaction in hypersensitive subjects. The potential of hexavalent chromium to produce a skin sensitization reaction is readily demonstrated using animal models. The incidence and characteristics of chromium-induced skin hypersensitivity as a clinical entity are described. A health effects survey of populations exposed to chromium slag in soil in Tokyo, Japan extending over 8 years indicated a tendency toward symptoms characterized as headache, chronic fatigue, and gastrointestinal complaints, positive occult blood tests, minute hematuria and albuminuria suggestive of incipient renal disease, and a tendency toward an increase in contact dermatitis that was seasonally related. Multicenter patch test titration studies in human subjects using an incidence of positive patch tests of 10% or less showed that the threshold for skin hypersensitivity reactions to hexavalent chromium was determined to be of the order 0.001% equivalent to 10 ppm or 10 mg/kg or 10 mg/L. Analysis of soil samples was conducted to predict the hexavalent chromium level from the total chromium level. Based on these data, the cleanup level of total chromium in soil is designated as 75 mg/kg. It is proposed that levels of total chromium lower than 75 mg/kg in soil would avoid undue risk of contact dermatitis.
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页码:111 / 119
页数:9
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