Hazard identification and risk assessment of pyrethroids in the indoor environment

被引:30
|
作者
Pauluhn, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Bayer AG, Inst Toxicol, D-42096 Wuppertal, Germany
关键词
hazard identification; risk assessment; pyrethroids; indoor environment; house dust; sensory irritation;
D O I
10.1016/S0378-4274(99)00047-8
中图分类号
R99 [毒物学(毒理学)];
学科分类号
100405 ;
摘要
Household insecticide products raise several important considerations concerning safety. These are related to the use of insecticides by untrained individuals, the difficulty of controlling the use of these products once purchased by the consumer and the potential exposure of the very young and very old, possibly with or without pre-existing pulmonary disease. Exposure to pyrethroids contained in mats or vaporizers, being slow release systems, have particular potential for long-term low-level exposure whilst for foggers, spray-cans or sprayed formulations the short-term high-level exposures may be of more concern. According to the volatility of the active ingredient contained in the household insecticide, its persistence in a non-inhalable matrix, i.e. sedimented house dust, may be short or long for highly volatile or low volatile active ingredients, respectively. On the other hand, the potential of exposure is apparently just reciprocal. This demonstrates that the extent and duration of exposure may be highly product-specific. Accordingly, the extent of exposure has to be accounted for and for risk assessment both concentration-dependent (e.g. sensory irritation) as well as concentration x time (= dose) related effects have to be considered and addressed in adequate bioassays. The issue as to whether pyrethroids adhering to house dust is of concern has been addressed in a model study using carpets treated with pyrethroids. This study has demonstrated that the total mass of pyrethroid applied to the carpet and that brushed off within an 18-h period is too small to be of any relevance for risk assessment. Therefore, assessment of health hazards in the indoor environment based simply on methodologies of emptying the household vacuum cleaner and analysing its content, which addresses contamination only, rather than examination of the actual airborne concentration, including other relevant airborne materials, is prone to tremendous errors and misjudgments. Due to the many substances potentially present in house dust and indoor air, e.g. bioaerosols originating from animals, pests and microorganisms, volatile organic substances (VOCs) or metals, prudent expert judgment is needed to assess the relevance of analytical findings. The complex indoor exposure scenario makes it especially difficult to causally relate clinical and epidemiological findings to arbitrarily selected indicator substances contained in a matrix not readily available to inhalation exposure. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:193 / 199
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment and Risk Control (HIRARC) Accidents at Power Plant
    Ahmed, Asmalia Che
    Zin, Ida Nianti Mohd
    Othman, Muhammad Kamil
    Muhamad, Nurul Huda
    4TH INTERNATIONAL BUILDING CONTROL CONFERENCE 2016 (IBCC 2016), 2016, 66
  • [32] Hazard interaction analysis for multi-hazard risk assessment: a systematic classification based on hazard-forming environment
    Liu, Baoyin
    Siu, Yim Ling
    Mitchell, Gordon
    NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2016, 16 (02) : 629 - 642
  • [33] Ecological exposure assessment approaches for indoor use pyrethroids in POTW effluent
    Holmes, Christopher
    Herbstritt, Stephanie
    Ritter, Amy
    Jackson, Scott
    Jones, Russell
    Hendley, Paul
    Allen, Richard
    Mitchell, Gary
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 252
  • [34] Strategy for genotoxic impurities: Hazard identification, risk assessment and management in Angelini
    Landolfi, C.
    Durando, L.
    TOXICOLOGY LETTERS, 2010, 196 : S173 - S173
  • [35] Development of an Index for Forest Fire Risk Assessment Considering Hazard Factors and the Hazard-Formative Environment
    Gong, Adu
    Huang, Zhiqing
    Liu, Longfei
    Yang, Yuqing
    Ba, Wanru
    Wang, Haihan
    REMOTE SENSING, 2023, 15 (21)
  • [36] Bow-tie diagrams in downstream hazard identification and risk assessment
    Saud, Yaneira E.
    Israni, Kumar
    Goddard, Jeremy
    PROCESS SAFETY PROGRESS, 2014, 33 (01) : 26 - 35
  • [37] CFD analysis of dense gas dispersion in indoor environment for risk assessment and risk mitigation
    Siddiqui, M.
    Jayanti, S.
    Swaminathan, T.
    JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2012, 209 : 177 - 185
  • [38] Hazard identification for risk assessment using the PRA technique in the automotive industry
    Dominguez, Claudia Rivera
    Guadian, Juan Eduardo Ramirez
    Lona, Jessica Guerrero
    Mares, Jovana Ivette Pozos
    SAFETY SCIENCE, 2023, 160
  • [39] A review of methods used for hazard identification and risk assessment of environmental hazards
    Chartres, Nicholas
    Bero, Lisa A.
    Norris, Susan L.
    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2019, 123 : 231 - 239
  • [40] Preliminary hazard identification for risk assessment on a complex system for hydrogen production
    Hadef, Hefaidh
    Negrou, Belkhir
    Gonzalez Ayuso, Tomas
    Djebabra, Mebarek
    Ramadan, Mohamad
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYDROGEN ENERGY, 2020, 45 (20) : 11855 - 11865