Evaluation of urinary methoxyphenols as biomarkers of woodsmoke exposure

被引:29
作者
Dills, RL
Paulsen, M
Ahmad, J
Kalman, DA
Elias, FN
Simpson, CD
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Sch Publ Hlth & Community Med, Dept Environm & Occupat Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Henry Ford Hosp, Dept Orthoped Surg, Detroit, MI 48202 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/es051886f
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Urinary methoxyphenols have been proposed as biomarkers for woodsmoke exposure, but the relationship between exposure and urinary methoxyphenol concentrations has not been characterized. We collected personal particulate matter(2.5) and urine samples from 9 adults experimentally exposed to smoke from an open wood fire to characterize this relationship. Personal exposures (PM2.5 mean 1500 mu g/m(3)) varied 3.5-fold. Twenty-two methoxyphenols, levoglucosan, and 17 polynuclear hydrocarbons were quantified by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry assays for personal filter samples and urine samples. Most methoxyphenols had measurable preexposure levels. Propylguaiacol, syringol, methylsyringol, ethylsyringol, and propylsyringol had peak urinary concentrations after the woodsmoke exposure. Eight subjects had peak urinary elimination of methoxyphenols within 6 h (t(1/2) 3-5 h), whereas one had delayed elimination. Several metrics for urinary excretion were evaluated. Analyte concentration was greatly affected by diuresis. Excretion rate and analyte concentrations normalized by creatinine gave a clearer signal and were equivalent in predictive ability. Twelve-hour average creatinine-normalized concentrations of each of the 5 methoxyphenols gave a Pearson correlation >= 0.8 with their particle-phase concentration. The sum of urinary concentrations for the 5 methoxyphenols versus levoglucosan on personal filters gave a regression coefficient of 0.75. This sum versus PM2.5 gave a regression coefficient of 0.79. The intercept of this regression suggests that the threshold for detection of an acute exposure event would be approximately 760 mu g/m(3) particulate matter from woodsmoke. The signal-to-noise (12-h postexosure average/preexposure average) ranged from 1.1 to 8 for the 5 methoxyphenols. Analysis of multiple compounds provided assurance that elevations were not artifactual due to food or other products.
引用
收藏
页码:2163 / 2170
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Source apportionment of PM2.5 at an urban IMPROVE site in Seattle, Washington [J].
Maykut, NN ;
Lewtas, J ;
Kim, E ;
Larson, TV .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2003, 37 (22) :5135-5142
[32]   FATE OF 2,6-DIMETHOXY [U-C-14] PHENOL IN RAT [J].
MILLER, JJ ;
POWELL, GM ;
OLAVESEN, AH ;
CURTIS, CG .
XENOBIOTICA, 1974, 4 (05) :285-289
[33]   Cardiorespiratory hospitalizations associated with smoke exposure during the 1997 Southeast Asian forest fires [J].
Mott, JA ;
Mannino, DM ;
Alverson, CJ ;
Kiyu, A ;
Hashim, J ;
Lee, T ;
Falter, K ;
Redd, SC .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYGIENE AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2005, 208 (1-2) :75-85
[34]  
Naeher LP, 2000, INDOOR AIR, V10, P200
[35]   PHARMACOKINETICS OF WOOD CREOSOTE - GLUCURONIC-ACID AND SULFATE CONJUGATION OF PHENOLIC-COMPOUNDS [J].
OGATA, N ;
MATSUSHIMA, N ;
SHIBATA, T .
PHARMACOLOGY, 1995, 51 (03) :195-204
[36]   Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the diet [J].
Phillips, DH .
MUTATION RESEARCH-GENETIC TOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL MUTAGENESIS, 1999, 443 (1-2) :139-147
[37]  
REINHARDT TE, 1994, SMOKE EXPOSURE PRESC
[38]   Enterohepatic circulation - Physiological, pharmacokinetic and clinical implications [J].
Roberts, MS ;
Magnusson, BM ;
Burczynski, FJ ;
Weiss, M .
CLINICAL PHARMACOKINETICS, 2002, 41 (10) :751-790
[39]   Wood-burning stoves and lower respiratory illnesses in Navajo children [J].
Robin, LF ;
Lees, PSJ ;
Winget, M ;
Steinhoff, M ;
Moulton, LH ;
Santosham, M ;
Correa, A .
PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL, 1996, 15 (10) :859-865
[40]   Impact of the 2002 Canadian forest fires on particulate matter air quality in Baltimore City [J].
Sapkota, A ;
Symons, JM ;
Kleissl, J ;
Wang, L ;
Parlange, MB ;
Ondov, J ;
Breysse, PN ;
Diette, GB ;
Eggleston, PA ;
Buckley, TJ .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2005, 39 (01) :24-32