In order to investigate human's exposure to permethrin from treated woollen textile floor coverings and possible adverse health effects, a study was carried out in 80 private homes in Hannover (Germany) equipped with woollen textile floor coverings (wool wall-to-wall carpets or woven or knotted rugs). For indoor monitoring, permethrin was determined both in house dust and on suspended particles. While permethrin concentrations in house dust (< 2 mm) were high (arithmetic mean: 53.7 mg/kg, 90th percentile 129.1 mg/kg), the permethrin concentrations in the air (suspended particles) were very low (arithmetic mean 2.8 ng/m3, 90th percentile 5.8 ng/m3, first sampling). Additional experiments demonstrate that permethrin on suspended particles result from carpet fiber abrasion (and not from an evaporation/re-condensation process). The internal exposure of the 145 inhabitants participating in the study was determined by biological monitoring (permethrin metabolites in urine). In a first sampling period almost 14% of the samples showed concentrations of the metabolite DCCA and almost 23% of the metabolite 3-PBA above the limit of detection (0.2 microgram/l). A model was developed which allows the calculation of the metabolite concentration in urine due to inhalative uptake of permethrin. Even for the worst case situation the calculated metabolite concentrations were ca. 30 times lower than the experimental results. The observed concentrations of metabolites are comparable to those of the background concentrations of the general population in Germany, suggesting that they must origin from other sources than woollen textile floor coverings. The indoor and biological monitoring data as well as the evaluation of the reported symptoms give no indication of an adverse health effect due to carpet treatment by permethrin.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1078/1438-4639-00181 | DOI Listing |
Forensic Sci Int
October 2023
Department of Crime, Society and Environment, Staffordshire University, Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Textile fibre evidence can provide important activity level information in criminal cases. To date, very few studies have investigated fibre persistence on fabrics exposed to aquatic conditions, even though items of evidence and victim's bodies can regularly be found in aquatic environments. This lack of research on whether fibres (and other trace evidence) persist on evidence submerged in water, has shown to impact practice as it is reported that crime scene examiners do not attempt to recover this evidence, due to the belief that it would not be present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
February 2023
Building Materials Institute, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Linkmenų Str. 28, LT-08217 Vilnius, Lithuania.
Textile waste is formed in various stages, from the preparation of raw materials to the utilisation of textile products. One of the sources of textile waste is the production of woollen yarns. During the production of woollen yarns, waste is generated during the mixing, carding, roving, and spinning processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Legal Med
September 2021
Labanof (Laboratorio di Antropologia e Odontologia Forense), Sezione di Medicina Legale, Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche per la Salute, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano, Italy.
When dealing with complex crimes such as rape and assault, every trace takes on an essential role. The hands are often the only means of defence and offence for the victim as well as a frequent area of contact with the environment; fingernails of a victim are a well-known possible source of DNA of the aggressor; nevertheless, they are more rarely treated as an area of interest for non-genetic material, particularly on living victims. The hyponychium, because of its physiological protective function, lends itself ideally to retaining different kinds of traces representative of an environment or various products and substrates that could shed light on the environment and objects involved in the event.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
December 2020
Department of Biotechnology, University Institute of Engineering and Technology, Panjab University (UIET), Chandigarh, India. Electronic address:
Immobilization of enzymes is an effective and potential technique for improving the enzyme characteristics and plays an important role in reducing the final cost of enzymatic reactions. However, the method of enzyme immobilization should be easy, cost-effective and environment friendly when applicable at industrial scale. In present study, the successful biochemical characterization of free and immobilized keratinase was evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
May 2020
Water Research Institute and School of Bioscience, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF10 3AX, UK. Electronic address:
As the global demand for textiles increases, so to do the potential environmental impacts that stem from their production, use and disposal. Freshwater ecosystems are particularly at risk: rivers often act as the primary recipients of waste generated during the production of textiles and are subject to pollutants released during the broader lifecycle of a textile product. Here, we investigate how global technological and societal processes shape the way we produce, use and dispose of textiles, and what this means for the environmental quality and ecological health of freshwaters.
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