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Environmental Health Perspectives Volume 105, Number 12, December 1997 Open Access
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Soil Ingestion: A Concern for Acute Toxicity in Children

Edward J. Calabrese, 1 Edward J. Stanek, 1 Robert C. James, 2 and Stephen M. Roberts 2

1 School of Public Health, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
2 Center for Environmental & Human Toxicology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA

Abstract

Several soil ingestion studies have indicated that some children ingest substantial amounts of soil on given days. Although the EPA has assumed that 95% of children ingest 200 mg soil/day or less for exposure assessment purposes, some children have been observed to ingest up to 25-60 g soil during a single day. In light of the potential for children to ingest such large amounts of soil, an assessment was made of the possibility for soil pica episodes to result in acute intoxication from contaminant concentrations the EPA regards as representing conservative screening values (i.e., EPA soil screening levels and EPA Region III risk-based concentrations for residential soils) . For a set of 13 chemicals included in the analysis, contaminant doses resulting from a one-time soil pica episode (5-50 g of soil ingested) were compared with acute dosages shown to produce toxicity in humans in clinical studies or case reports. For four of these chemicals, a soil pica episode was found to result in a contaminant dose approximating or exceeding the acute human lethal dose. For five of the remaining chemicals, the contaminant dose from a soil pica episode was well within the reported dose range in humans for toxicity other than lethality. Because both the exposure episodes and the toxicological response information are derived from observations in humans, these findings are regarded as particularly relevant for human health risk assessment. They suggest that, for some chemicals, ostensibly conservative soil criteria based on chronic exposure using current EPA methodology may not be protective of children during acute soil pica episodes. Key words : , , , , . Environ Health Perspect 105:1354-1358 (1997) .


Address correspondence to E.J. Calabrese, School of Public Health, University of Massachusetts, Morrill, N344, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.

Received 2 July 1997 ; accepted 4 September 1997.


The full version of this article is available for free in HTML format.
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