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Heavy metals in urban road dusts from Kolkata and Bengaluru, India: implications for human health. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Air pollution, particularly from road dust, is a significant environmental issue in urban areas like Kolkata and Bengaluru, India, affecting human health due to exposure to harmful elements.
  • The study analyzed road dust samples for various inorganic components, revealing high levels of heavy metals and identifying specific risks associated with vehicle traffic and local industries.
  • The findings indicated that lead exposure, particularly for children in Kolkata, posed the greatest health risk through ingestion, while chromium was a concern in Bengaluru, highlighting the importance of addressing urban dust pollution.

Article Abstract

Air pollution and dust pollution are major urban environmental issues, with road dust being a potential source and a pathway for human exposure. The developing megacities of India, where the population may spend a significant portion of their working lives close to the roadside, including consuming street food, have obvious source-pathway-receptor linkages. The aim of this study in Kolkata and Bengaluru, India, was to evaluate the risk to human health from inorganic components of road dust. Samples were collected and analysed from a cross section of urban environments for a wide range of anthropogenic and geogenic elements, some such as antimony showing an increase in response to vehicle activity. Calculated enrichment factors relative to crustal abundance demonstrated significant enrichment in common heavy metals and less commonly reported elements, e.g. molybdenum, antimony, that may be used as contaminant markers. Factor analysis gave multielement signatures associated with geography, vehicle traffic and local industry. The bio-accessibility of road dusts in terms of ingestion was determined using the BARGE method with more than 50% of zinc and lead being available in some cases. A formal human health risk assessment using the US EPA framework showed that lead in Kolkata and chromium in Bengaluru were the elements of most concern amongst chromium, nickel, copper, zinc and lead. However, the only risk combination (hazard index) shown to be significant was lead exposure to children in Kolkata. Ingestion dominated the risk pathways, being significantly greater than dermal and inhalation routes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10653-019-00467-4DOI Listing

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