• Title of article

    PCDD/F and dioxin-like PCB in human blood and milk from German mothers Original Research Article

  • Author/Authors

    Jürgen Wittsiepe، نويسنده , , PETER FURST، نويسنده , , Petra Schrey، نويسنده , , Friederike Lemm، نويسنده , , Martin Kraft، نويسنده , , Georg Eberwein، نويسنده , , Gerhard Winneke، نويسنده , , Michael Wilhelm، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    286
  • To page
    294
  • Abstract
    Blood samples of pregnant women aged between 19 and 42 years at the time they gave birth and milk samples from the same women following delivery were collected between September 2000 and January 2003 from 169 participants living in an industrialized area of Germany (Duisburg birth cohort study). All samples were analyzed for their content of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/F) as well as dioxin-like and indicator polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB). Levels of WHO-TEq were in the range of 4.34–97.3 pg/glipid base (median: 26.37, arithmetic mean: 28.36) for blood, or 3.01–78.7 pg/glipid base (median: 26.40, arithmetic mean: 27.27) for milk, respectively. The four congeners 12378-PeCDD, 23478-PeCDF, 33′44′5-PeCB (# 126) and 233′44′5-HxCB (# 156) contribute the main share to total WHO-TEq. The contribution of PCDD/F in relation to PCB to total WHO-TEq was 60:40% in blood and 52:48% in milk. Good correlations of the contaminant levels in lipid base between both matrices were found. The distribution between blood and milk depends on the molecular weight of the substances. Higher chlorinated PCDD/F- and PCB-congeners were found in 2–4-fold higher concentrations in blood in relation to milk and the concentrations of lower chlorinated PCB-congeners were up to 2-fold higher in milk in relation to blood. The body burden of PCDD/F and PCB increases with age and decreases over the total nursing period. Women who had lived outside highly industrialized countries showed lower concentrations of PCDD/F and PCB. In some cases, elevated levels of PCB were observed when the women had previously lived in Eastern Europe for a long time. In comparison with recent data, the decline in human PCDD/F and PCB levels observed during the nineties seems to have stopped. The individual exposures of the infants due to breastfeeding within the first 18 months were calculated to be from 4.4 to 318 ng WHO-TEq (median: 106, arithmetic mean: 118). The actual mean daily exposure of a breastfed infant can be estimated to 131 pg WHO-TEq/kgbody weight.
  • Keywords
    Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins , Polychlorinated dibenzofurans , polychlorinated biphenyls , human milk , Germany , Human blood
  • Journal title
    Chemosphere
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Chemosphere
  • Record number

    725021