• Title of article

    The influence of dietary concentration on the absorption and excretion of persistent lipophilic organic pollutants in the human intestinal tract

  • Author/Authors

    G. Andreas Moser، نويسنده , , Michael S. McLachlan، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    201
  • To page
    211
  • Abstract
    The gastrointestinal exchange of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dibenzo-p-dioxins, and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) as well as hexachlorobenzene was measured in five volunteers. The dietary intake and the fecal excretion of the chemicals were quantified and the net absorption/net excretion was calculated as the difference between these two fluxes. Experiments were conducted using an elevated dietary intake and a reduced dietary intake of chemical, and the results were compared with the absorption during normal dietary intake. The net absorption varied widely with the dietary intake for those compounds which bioaccumulate in humans; high dietary intake of chemical resulted in absorption approaching 100% of intake, while low dietary intake resulted in a net excretion several times greater than the dietary intake. In contrast to net absorption, the chemical flux in the feces was largely independent of the dietary intake of chemical for a given individual. Good agreement was found between the feces/blood distribution coefficients measured in this study and in a study with contaminated workers whose blood concentrations were several orders of magnitude higher, indicating that fecal excretion of chemical is linearly proportional to the blood concentration. The results suggest that gastrointestinal exchange can be viewed as two processes operating simultaneously: absorption of contaminant from the diet, and excretion of contaminant from the bodyʹs reservoirs via the feces. By subtracting that component of the fecal flux originating from the body, the maximum dietary absorption could be calculated. This was >95% for most of the compounds, decreasing to a minimum of 50–60% for the octachlorinated dioxins and furans. The maximum dietary absorption showed a KOW dependency consistent with the two film model of gastrointestinal absorption of persistent organic chemicals.
  • Keywords
    PCDD/F , dietary intake , HCB , fecal excretion , Human absorption , POPs , PLOPs , PCB
  • Journal title
    Chemosphere
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Chemosphere
  • Record number

    735760