We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Comparison of a toxicokinetic and a questionnaire-based approach to assess methylmercury intake in exposed individuals.
- Authors
Noisel, Nolwenn; Bouchard, Michèle; Carrier, Gaétan; Plante, Michel
- Abstract
Methylmercury (MeHg) is a neurotoxic contaminant and one of the main sources of exposure in humans is seafood consumption. It is thus of interest to assess precisely MeHg exposure. The objective of this study was to estimate MeHg daily intake in exposed individuals using two different approaches, a food questionnaire and toxicokinetic modeling, and compare the complementary and use of each method. For this purpose, a group of 23 fishermen from northern Quebec provided blood and hair samples and answered a standard food questionnaire focusing on seafood consumption. A published and validated toxicokinetic model was then used to reconstruct MeHg daily intakes from mercury (Hg) measurements in biological samples. These intakes were compared to those estimated using a standard food questionnaire on seafood consumption. Daily intakes of MeHg from seafood (mean/median (range)) estimated from hair concentrations with the toxicokinetic-based approach were 6.1/5.2 (0.0-19) μg/day. These intake values were on average six times lower than those estimated using a food questionnaire, that is, 49/32 (7.2-163) μg/day. No correlation was found between the toxicokinetic-based and the questionnaire estimates of MeHg daily intakes. Most of the MeHg intakes estimated with the food questionnaire (21/23) exceeded the US EPA RfD of 0.1 μg/kg bw/day, whereas only a small proportion (6/23) of modeled estimates exceeded the RfD. This study shows that human health risk estimates strongly depend on the chosen approach.
- Subjects
TOXICOLOGICAL chemistry; METHYLMERCURY; COMPARATIVE studies; QUESTIONNAIRES; NEUROTOXICOLOGY; HAZARDOUS substance exposure; SEAFOOD poisoning; BIOMARKERS
- Publication
Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, 2011, Vol 21, Issue 3, p328
- ISSN
1559-0631
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/jes.2010.33