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Royal Society of Chemistry, Journal of Environmental Monitoring, 3(11), p. 610

DOI: 10.1039/b817097e

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Human toenails as a biomarker of exposure to elevated environmental arsenic

Journal article published in 2009 by Mark Button, Mj Watts, Grt Jenkin, Cf Harrington ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A pilot study was conducted to determine the applicability of toenails as a biomarker of exposure to elevated environmental arsenic (As) levels. A total of 17 individuals were recruited for the pilot study: 8 residents living near to a former As mine, Devon, UK, forming the exposed group, plus 9 residents from Nottinghamshire, UK, with no anticipated As exposure who were used for comparison as a control group. All toenail samples were thoroughly washed prior to analysis and the wash solutions retained for As determination via ICP-MS to provide an indication of the background environmental As levels for each group. Total As was determined in washed toenail samples via ICP-MS following microwave assisted acid digestion. Concentrations of total As in the toenails of the exposed group were elevated, ranging from 858 to 25 981 microg kg(-1) (geometric mean = 5406 microg kg(-1)), compared to the control group whose toenail As concentrations ranged from 73 to 273 microg kg(-1) (geometric mean = 122 microg kg(-1)). Higher levels of exogenous As contamination were present on the toenails of the exposed group (geometric mean = 506 microg kg(-1)) compared to the control group (geometric mean = 4.0 microg kg(-1)) providing evidence of higher environmental As levels in the exposed group. Total As concentrations in toenail samples were positively correlated to environmental As levels (r = 0.60, p < 0.001). HPLC-ICP-MS analysis of aqueous toenail extracts revealed inorganic arsenite (As(III)) to be the dominant species extracted ( approximately 83%) with lesser amounts of inorganic arsenate (As(V)) and organic dimethylarsinate (DMA(V)) at approximately 13% and approximately 8.5%, respectively. Arsenic speciation in analysed toenail extracts from the two groups was comparable. The only notable difference between groups was the presence of small amounts (<1%) of organic methylarsonate (MA(V)) in two toenail samples from the exposed group. Toenails are presented as a viable biomarker of exposure at sites with elevated environmental As, such as the former mining sites found throughout Devon and Cornwall, UK.