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Journal article

Dermal Uptake of Benzophenone-3 from Clothing

From

Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering1

International Centre for Indoor Environment and Energy, Department of Civil Engineering2

Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute3

Department of Material Analysis and Indoor Chemistry4

Institute of Combustion Technology5

Department of Growth and Reproduction and6

Benzophenone-3 (also known as BP-3 or oxybenzone) is added to sunscreens, plastics, and some coatings to filter UV radiation. The suspected endocrine disruptor BP-3 has been detected in the air and settled dust of homes and is expected to redistribute from its original sources to other indoor compartments, including clothing.

Given its physical and chemical properties, we hypothesized that dermal uptake from clothing could contribute to the body burden of this compound. First, cotton shirts were exposed to air at an elevated concentration of BP-3 for 32 days; the final air concentration was 4.4 μg/m3. Next, three participants wore the exposed shirts for 3 h.

After 3 h of exposure, participants wore their usual clothing during the collection of urine samples for the next 48 h. Urine was analyzed for BP-3, a metabolite (BP-1), and six other UV filters. The rate of urinary excretion of the sum of BP-1 and BP-3 increased for all participants during and following the 3 h of exposure.

The summed mass of BP-1 and BP-3 excreted during the first 24 h attributable to wearing exposed t-shirts were 12, 9.9, and 82 μg for participants 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Analysis of these results, coupled with predictions of steady-state models, suggest that dermal uptake of BP-3 from clothing could meaningfully contribute to overall body burden.

Language: English
Publisher: American Chemical Society
Year: 2017
Pages: 11371-11379
ISSN: 15205851 and 0013936x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b02623

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