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1.
Chemosphere ; 351: 141241, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38242514

ABSTRACT

Pesticides are among the most widely used chemicals thus contributing to a global contamination of the environment. Studies in North America and Europe have reported ambient air concentrations of Currently Used Pesticides in rural and urban locations as well as in remote areas. Monitoring pesticides in air is required for a better understanding of human exposure through inhalation and to assess potential health effects related to this exposure pathway. In this study, 46 pesticides were analyzed in ambient air in sampling stations distributed over Wallonia during a year, from May 2015 to May 2016. Different typologies were defined for sampling sites (remote areas, urban sites, agricultural sites, livestock area, and sites with other professional uses). Ambient air was sampled for 14 days with an active air sampler at a flow rate of 4 m³/h. Quartz filters and PUF/XAD-2/PUF cartridges were used to sample both gas and particulate phase pesticides. On the 46 pesticides studied, 6 insecticides, 18 herbicides and 18 fungicides were detected. Herbicides were measured in 68.3% of samples throughout the year, whereas fungicides and insecticides were measured in 62.6% and 13.2% of the samples, respectively. The highest mean concentrations for all pesticides were measured in spring-summer, whereas few pesticides were measured at low concentrations in winter. Six pesticides were measured in the remote sampling station at lower concentrations than in all other sites highlighting volatility of these pesticides. The highest number of different pesticides and the highest concentrations were measured in agricultural stations, where uses of plant protection products are higher. Finally, less volatile pesticides were only detected near application areas and at low concentrations. Together, these results provide better insight on the spatial and temporal variations of pesticides concentrations in ambient air, which were related to pesticides uses as well to atmospheric volatility and persistence.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants , Fungicides, Industrial , Herbicides , Insecticides , Pesticides , Humans , Pesticides/analysis , Belgium , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Air Pollutants/analysis
2.
Environ Pollut ; 312: 120028, 2022 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36030963

ABSTRACT

Eighty eight adult gardeners and their relatives volunteered to provide urine and blood samples for a human biomonitoring survey among users of one of the biggest allotment garden from Wallonia, showing high trace metal(oid) concentrations in soils. The purpose was to determine if environmental levels of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd) and arsenic (As) led to concentrations of potential health concern in the study population. Blood and urine biomarkers were compared to reference and intervention cut-off values selected from the literature. The study population exhibited (i) moderately high blood lead levels with median value of 23.1 µg/L, (ii) high urinary concentrations of speciated As (inorganic arsenic and its metabolites) with a median value of 7.17 µg/g.cr., i.e. twice the median values usually observed in general populations, and (iii) very high Cd levels in urine with a median value of 1.23 µg/L, in the range of 95th-97.5th percentiles measured in general adult populations. Biomarker levels in the study population were also mostly above those measured in adults from local populations living on contaminated soils, as reported in the current literature. All biomarkers of Pb, Cd and As showed weak to strong statistically significant correlations, pointing towards a joint environmental source to these three contaminants as being at least partially responsible for the high exposure levels observed. Urine and blood biomarkers show statistically significant associations with variables related to individual characteristics (age, smoking status, …) and Pb domestic sources (Pb pipes, cosmetics, …) but involves also behavioral and consuming habits related to gardening activities on the contaminated allotment garden. At such levels, owing to co-exposure and additive effects of Cd, As and Pb regarding renal toxicity known from literature, the study strongly suggests that this population of gardeners is at risk with respect to chronic kidney diseases.


Subject(s)
Arsenic , Metals, Heavy , Soil Pollutants , Adult , Arsenic/analysis , Biological Monitoring , Cadmium/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Humans , Lead/analysis , Metals, Heavy/analysis , Soil , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Zinc/analysis
3.
Environ Pollut ; 301: 119018, 2022 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35182653

ABSTRACT

Given the many public health and environmental impacts associated with the use of pesticides, comprehensive pesticide application data are a high priority for environmental and health professionals, government agencies, and community groups in Wallonia (Belgium). In that context, geographic information system (GIS) approaches for mapping estimates of agricultural pesticide use were developed in the present study. Data on pesticide application rates and high-resolution annual datasets of the geographic distribution of crops were used to complete this analysis in Wallonia over the period 2015-2017. The method was implemented in Python in order to allow easy update and improvements of maps, or to segment maps by individual pesticides, chemical groups of pesticides (e.g. insecticides, herbicides), etc. Linked databases were created to classify, select, and possibly weight AIs according to specific requests and criteria. The results provide a first map of agricultural pesticide use in Wallonia, which depicts the best picture up to now of their geographic distribution. Maps of fungicides, herbicides, and plant growth regulators showed quite similar spatial patterns as the map of the combination of all pesticides. In contrast, the insecticide map showed a specific pattern related almost exclusively to dwarf-tree orchards in some municipalities in northern Wallonia. This research work is a preliminary result on the spatial characterization of agricultural pesticide use in Wallonia and give a valuable basis for research and environmental health actions in Belgium. Forthcoming developments will focus on exposure characterization to agricultural pesticides using GIS models. Using this information, policymakers will able to detect potential priority zones and take action to check and reduce agricultural pesticide loads in the environment.


Subject(s)
Pesticides , Agriculture/methods , Belgium , Environmental Exposure/analysis , Environmental Health , Pesticides/analysis
4.
Environ Geochem Health ; 44(11): 3853-3861, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34714462

ABSTRACT

This study presents an alternative method to the traditional reference dose approach for the determination of health risk-based soil standards for arsenic. The model combines multimedia equations for air, soil and dietary exposure, a toxicokinetic component, a probabilistic output, a reference distribution for urine arsenic in the general population and exposure parameters values traceable in US-EPA or EFSA reference studies. The model calculates a mean inorganic As urine concentration AsU (sum of inorganic arsenic Asi and its metabolites) from environmental data and exposure parameters, which is attributed to the central value of a lognormal distribution. Risk is assessed by comparing a high percentile of the modelled distribution to the target AsU attributed to the reference value of 10 µg/gCREA (microgram As per gram of creatinine), the upper confidence interval of the 95th percentile from the AsU distribution in the French population. A soil standard value of 40 mg/kg is determined as being the arsenic concentration in soil not giving rise to more than 5% probability of having a AsU concentration above the target value of 10 µg/gCREA. Once soil As concentrations above 40 mg/kg are measured, further environmental investigations should be carried, involving an assessment of As bioaccessibility to address health risks and decide of regulatory measures in residential setting.


Subject(s)
Arsenic , Humans , Arsenic/toxicity , Arsenic/analysis , Soil , Creatinine , Toxicokinetics , Environmental Exposure/analysis
5.
Toxicol Lett ; 329: 1-11, 2020 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32371136

ABSTRACT

In spring 2016, a study was carried out to characterize currently used pesticide (CUP) exposure among children living in Wallonia (Belgium). Pesticides were measured in both first morning urine voids of 258 children aged from 9 to 12 years and in ambient air collected close to the children's schools. Out of the 46 pesticides measured in the air, 19 were detected with frequencies varying between 11 % and 100 %, and mean levels ranging from <0.04 to 2.37 ng/m³. Only 3 parent pesticides were found in 1-10% of the urine samples, while all the metabolites analyzed were positively detected at least once. The captan metabolite (THPI) was quantified in 23.5 % of the samples, while 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol (chlopryrifos metabolite) was detected in all urines with levels ranging from 0.36-38.96 µg/l. 3-phenoxybenzoic acid (3-PBA), trans-3-(2,2-dichlorovinyl)-2,2-dimethylcyclopropane carboxylic acid (t-DCCA) and diethylphosphate were the most abundant pyrethroid metabolites and dialkylphosphate measured. The air inhalation was demonstrated to be a minor route of exposure for the selected CUPs. Statistical regressions highlighted predictors of exposure for some pesticides such like consumption of grey bread, presence of carpets at home or indoor use of pesticides, although no clear source was identified for most of them.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/urine , Environmental Exposure , Pesticides/urine , Air Pollutants/chemistry , Belgium , Child , Environmental Monitoring , Female , Humans , Male , Pesticides/chemistry
6.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 27(6): 5681-5692, 2020 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30725260

ABSTRACT

In response to the Walloon Environment and Health Program, the Scientific Institute of Public Services (ISSeP) developed an integrated approach of environmental exposure assessment in the Walloon region, Belgium. The study presents an index-based approach to estimate the multiple environmental burdens at regional level and detailed local resolution. Indicators are based on environmental measurements of pollutants in ambient air and soil, and on stressors for citizens related to noise and radon. These indicators were mapped as proportions to obtain an accurate comparison between spatial units. In order to indicate the need for intervention, environmental indicators are calculated as the proportion of areas where the level of detrimental environmental factors exceeds threshold values from WHO guidelines and Walloon legal threshold values. In parallel, a spatial web tool based on GIS was developed to enable a flexible and weighted combination of the normalized indicators by computing the resulting composite index online. This interactive web tool designed for policy makers and experts eases the spatial analysis of results in order to identify geographic areas where hotspot exposures are a potential risk to human health. The next steps of this work aim to integrate more environmental indicators (stressors and benefits) and some sociodemographic and health indicators in order to detect vulnerable populations. A holistic assessment is essential to inform environmental justice debates and to ensure a health conducive equal environment. Finally, this environmental health tool will support decision makers focus resources and programs to improve the environmental health of Walloons living in areas disproportionately burdened by multiple sources of pollution.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure , Environmental Health , Environmental Pollution , Belgium , Environmental Pollution/adverse effects , Humans , Noise , Radon
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