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Division of Laboratory Sciences
National Report on Human Exposure to Environmental Chemicals

Perchlorate

Reference

Blount BC, Valentin-Blasini L, Osterloh JD, Mauldin JP, Pirkle JL. Perchlorate exposure of the U.S. Population, 2001-2002. J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol 2006;10:1-8.

Abstract

Perchlorate is commonly found in the environment and can impair thyroid function at pharmacological doses. As a result of the potential for widespread human exposure to this biologically active chemical, we assessed perchlorate exposure in a nationally representative population of 2820 U.S. residents, ages 6 years and older, during 2001 and 2002 as part of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). We found detectable levels of perchlorate (>0.05 µg/L) in all 2820 urine samples tested, indicating widespread human exposure to perchlorate. Urinary perchlorate levels were distributed in a log normal fashion with a median of 3.6 µg/L (3.38 µg/g creatinine) and a 95th percentile of 14 µg/L (12.7 µg/g creatinine). When geometric means of urinary perchlorate levels were adjusted for age, fasting, sex and race-ethnicity, we found significantly higher levels of urinary perchlorate in children compared with adolescents and adults. We estimated total daily perchlorate dose for each adult (ages 20 years and older), based on urinary perchlorate, urinary creatinine concentration and physiological parameters predictive of creatinine excretion rate. The 95th percentile of the distribution of estimated daily perchlorate doses in the adult population was 0.234 µg/kg-day [CI 0.202-0.268 µg/kg-day] and is below the EPA reference dose (0.7 µg/kg-day), a dose estimated to be without appreciable risk of adverse effects during a lifetime of exposure. These data provide the first population-based assessment of the magnitude and prevalence of perchlorate exposure in the US.

Full Text

The full text of this publication is available from:
Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology (JESEE)

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