Distribution and health risks of organic micropollutants from home dusts in Malaysia
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2022
Abstract
Indoor dust is an important medium to evaluate human exposure to emerging organic contaminants. The principal aim of this study was to determine overall status of organic micropollutants (OMPs) of indoor dust in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and assess their corresponding health risks. One hundred thirty-three OMPs, ascribed to 13 chemical groups, were screened by Automated Identification and Quantification System with a GC-MS database. The concentrations of OMPs ranged between 460 and 4000 mu g/g, with the median concentration of 719 mu g/g. The dominant chemical groups were ascribed to n-alkanes (median: 274 mu g/g), plasticizers (151 mu g/g), sterols (120 mu g/g), and pesticides (42.6 mu g/g). Cholestrol was the most abundant compound (median: 115 mu g/g). Different sources and usage patterns of OMPs in various houses were expected. Toxicity values of OMPs were obtained from existing databases or predicted by quantitative structure-activity relationship models. Cumulative hazard quotients for OMPs through ingestion route were lower than one for all the dust samples, demonstrating that there was no remarkable non-cancer risk. The cancer risks of these OMPs were greater than 10-4, with cholestrol dominating 99.1% of the carcinogenic risks, which suggested that there was a significant cancer risk. This study might offer a benchmark to ensure the safety of chemical usages in future in Malaysia.
Keywords
Organic micropollutants, House dust, Malaysia, Microenvironment, Health risk assessment
Divisions
fac_eng
Funders
Hitachi Scholarship Research Support Program,Hitachi Global Foundation, Japan [IF068-2020]
Publication Title
Chemosphere
Volume
309
Issue
1
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher Location
THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND