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83102 
Journal Article 
Bioavailability of lead to juvenile swine dosed with soil from the Smuggler Mountain NPL site of Aspen, Colorado 
Casteel, SW; Cowart, RP; Weis, CP; Henningsen, GM; Hoffman, E; Brattin, WJ; Guzman, RE; Starost, MF; Payne, JT; Stockham, SL; Becker, SV; Drexler, JW; Turk, JR 
1997 
Yes 
Fundamental and Applied Toxicology
ISSN: 0272-0590
EISSN: 1095-6832 
36 
177-187 
English 
Bioavailability of lead (Pb) has become an issue in quantifying exposure of sensitive populations and, where necessary, establishing cleanup levels for contaminated soil. Immature swine were used as a model for young children to estimate the degree to which Pb from two fully characterized composite samples from the Smuggler Mountain Superfund Site in Aspen, Colorado may be bioavailable to resident children. The composite soils contained 14,200 and 3870 micrograms Pb/g of soil. Relative and absolute enteric bioavailabilities of Pb in soil (oral dose groups of 75,225, and 675 micrograms Pb/kg body wt/day) were estimated by comparison with an orally administered soluble Pb salt (lead acetate = PbAc2.3H2O) (dose groups of 0, 75, and 225 micrograms Pb/kg body wt/day) and an intravenously administered aqueous solution of Pb (100 micrograms Pb/kg/ day) from the same trihydrate salt administered daily for 15 days to 50 juvenile swine. The biological responses (area under the blood Pb concentration-time curve, and the terminal liver-, kidney-, and bone-lead concentrations) produced by Pb from PbAc2.3H2O and lead-contaminated soils were determined. This study revealed Pb from soil containing 14,200 micrograms Pb/g of soil had a bioavailability relative to Pb from PbAc (RBA), ranging from 56% based on the area under the blood lead concentration-time curve (AUC) versus dose, to 86% based on calculations from liver-Pb loading versus dose. Similarly, Pb from soil containing 3870 micrograms Pb/g of soil had an RBA ranging from 58% based on the AUC versus dose, to 74% based on calculations from liver- and kidney-Pb loading versus dose. Bioavailability of Pb in soils may be more or less than EPA's default RBA of 60%, therefore, measuring site-specific RBAs provides a basis for improved exposure and risk assessment. 
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• ISA-Lead (2013 Final Project Page)
     Considered
     Cited
          1st Draft
          2nd Draft
          3rd Draft
          Final
     Toxicokinetics
• ISA - Lead (2024 Final Project Page)
     Included in Peer Input Draft
          Appendix 2 (Exposure)
     Included in External Review Draft
          Appendix 2 (Exposure)
     Included in Final Draft
          Appendix 2 (Exposure)