Dietary Arsenic Exposure in Bangladesh
- 1 June 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Environmental Health Perspectives in Environmental Health Perspectives
- Vol. 115 (6) , 889-893
- https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.9462
Abstract
Millions of people in Bangladesh are at risk of chronic arsenic toxicity from drinking contaminated groundwater, but little is known about diet as an additional source of As exposure. We employed a duplicate diet survey to quantify daily As intake in 47 women residing in Pabna, Bangladesh. All samples were analyzed for total As, and a subset of 35 samples were measured for inorganic arsenic (iAs) using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry equipped with a dynamic reaction cell. Median daily total As intake was 48 microg As/day [interquartile range (IQR), 33-67) from food and 4 microg As/day (IQR, 2-152) from drinking water. On average, iAs comprised 82% of the total As detected in dietary samples. After adjusting for the estimated inorganic fraction, 34% [95% confidence interval (CI), 21-49%] of all participants exceeded the World Health Organization's provisional tolerable daily intake (PTDI) of 2.1 microg As/kg-day. Two of the 33 women who used a well with < 50 microg As/L exceeded this recommendation. When drinking water concentrations exceeded the Bangladesh drinking water standard of 50 microg As/L, ingested water was the dominant source of exposure. However, as drinking water As concentrations decrease, the relative contribution of dietary As sources becomes more important to ingested dose. The combined intake from both diet and drinking water can cause some individuals to exceed the PTDI in spite of using a tube well that contains < 50 microg As/L.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Arsenic speciation transported through the placenta from mother mice to their newborn pupsEnvironmental Research, 2006
- Inorganic arsenic in cooked rice and vegetables from Bangladeshi householdsScience of The Total Environment, 2006
- Neuropsychological correlates of hair arsenic, manganese, and cadmium levels in school-age children residing near a hazardous waste siteNeuroToxicology, 2005
- Toenail Arsenic Concentrations, GSTT1 Gene Polymorphisms, and Arsenic Exposure from Drinking WaterCancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, 2005
- Impact of irrigation with As rich groundwater on soil and crops: A geochemical case study in West Bengal Delta Plain, IndiaApplied Geochemistry, 2005
- Water Arsenic Exposure and Children’s Intellectual Function in Araihazar, BangladeshEnvironmental Health Perspectives, 2004
- Water intake in an Asian population living in arsenic-contaminated areaToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 2004
- Arsenic and heavy metal contamination of vegetables grown in Samta village, BangladeshScience of The Total Environment, 2003
- Groundwater arsenic contamination in Bangladesh and West Bengal, India.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000
- A resampling method based on pivotal estimating functionsBiometrika, 1994