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HERO ID
999322
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Critical factors in assessing exposure to PBDEs via house dust
Author(s)
Allen, JG; Mcclean, MD; Stapleton, HM; Webster, TF
Year
2008
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Environment International
ISSN:
0160-4120
EISSN:
1873-6750
Volume
34
Issue
8
Page Numbers
1085-1091
Language
English
PMID
18456330
DOI
10.1016/j.envint.2008.03.006
Web of Science Id
WOS:000260368500001
URL
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412008000433
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Abstract
Assessment of indoor exposure to polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) requires a critical examination of methods that may influence exposure estimates and comparisons between studies. We measured PBDEs in residential dust collected from 20 homes in Boston, MA, to examine 5 key questions: 1) Does the choice of dust exposure metric-e.g., concentration (ng/g) or dust loading (ng/m2)-affect analysis and results? 2) To what degree do dust concentrations change over time? 3) Do dust concentrations vary between rooms? 4) Is the home vacuum bag an acceptable surrogate for researcher-collected dust? 5) Are air and dust concentrations correlated for the same room? We used linear mixed-effects models to analyze the data while accounting for within-home and within-room correlations. We found that PBDE dust concentration and surface loading were highly correlated (r=0.86-0.95, p<0.001). Average dust concentrations did not significantly differ over an 8-month period, possibly because home furnishings changed little over this time. We observed significant differences between rooms in the same home: PBDE concentrations in the main living area were 97% higher than the bedroom for decaBDE (p=0.02) and 72% higher for pentaBDE (p=0.05). Home vacuum bag dust concentrations were significantly lower than researcher-collected dust and not strongly correlated. Air (vapor and particulate phase) and dust concentrations were correlated for pentaBDE (p=0.62, p<0.01), but not for decaBDE (p=0.25). In addition, potential markers of BDE 209 debromination (BDE 202 and the BDE197:BDE201 ratio) were also observed in household dust samples. One vacuum bag sample contained the highest concentrations of BDE 209 (527,000 ng/g) and total PBDEs (544,000 ng/g) that have been reported in house dust.
Keywords
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs); Exposure; Debromination
Tags
Other
•
Nanoscale Carbon
All References Cited
External Review Draft
Exposure Uptake Dose
Analytical Methods
Peer Reviewed Draft
Exposure, Uptake, and Dose
Priority Area: Ch. 4 and Appendix E
Lower Priority Areas: Appendices G and H
Final Case Study
Product Life Cycle
Lower Priority Areas: Appendices G and H
Transport & Fate
Lower Priority Areas: Appendices G and H
Exposure, Uptake, and Dose
Lower Priority Areas: Appendices G and H
Impacts
Lower Priority Areas: Appendices G and H
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