December 1, 2005
Journal Article

Evaluation of Exposure to Arsenic in Residential Soil

Abstract

In response to concerns regarding arsenic in soil from a pesticide manufacturing plant, we conducted a biomonitoring study on children younger than 7 years of age, the age category of children most exposed to soil. Urine samples from 77 children (47% participation rate) were analyzed for total arsenic and arsenic species related to ingestion of inorganic arsenic. Older individuals also provided urine (n = 362) and toenail (n = 67) samples. Speciated urinary arsenic levels were similar between children (geometric mean, geometric SD, and range: 4.0, 2.2, and 0.89–17.7 µg/L, respectively) and older participants (3.8, 1.9, 0.91–19.9 µg/L) and consistent with unexposed populations. Toenail samples were

Revised: January 31, 2006 | Published: December 1, 2005

Citation

Tsuji J.S., M.D. Van Kerkhove, R. Kaetzel, C. Scrafford, P. Mink, L.M. Barraj, and E.A. Crecelius, et al. 2005. Evaluation of Exposure to Arsenic in Residential Soil. Environmental Health Perspectives 113, no. 12:1735-1740. PNWD-SA-6990. doi:10.1289/ehp.8178