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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science, Ltd
    British journal of dermatology 145 (2001), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2133
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Background After exposure, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is excreted via the faeces, breast milk and epidermal lipids. Objectives To determine to what extent TCDD is eliminated via the skin and to evaluate whether cutaneous elimination can be accelerated by the application of petrolatum. Methods In two patients severely intoxicated with TCDD, material obtained from the skin surface and, in one patient, cerumen and the content of epithelial cysts, was analysed for TCDD. Results The TCDD concentration in the initial blood sample taken was 144 000 pg g−1 blood fat in patient 1, and 26 000 pg g−1 blood fat in patient 2. Six months later, when the skin tests were performed, the blood TCDD levels had decreased to 80 900 and 16 100 pg g−1 blood fat, respectively. In the two samples of pooled cyst contents from patient 1, TCDD levels of 34 400 and 18 600 pg g−1 fat were found. A cerumen sample contained TCDD at 20 500 pg g−1 fat. In the material collected from the skin surface we observed a linear increase of the amount of TCDD measured per test field with time, indicating a continuous elimination of TCDD via the skin. The daily amount of TCDD eliminated via the skin was 1·51 pg cm−2 in patient 1 and 0·57 pg cm−2 in patient 2. Application of petrolatum led to a twofold increase in the amount of TCDD measured in patient 1, but had no significant effect in patient 2. Conclusions In our patients, elimination of TCDD via the skin, most probably through desquamating scales, represented 1–2% of the overall daily TCDD elimination rate, with regard to the body surface and when calculated on the basis of the half-life of TCDD at the time of the skin test. If a more typical overall elimination half-life of 7 years is used as the basis for the calculation, the skin would account for 9%(patient 1) and 15%(patient 2) of the overall elimination. Although we observed an increase in TCDD in material derived from the skin surface of up to 100% after application of petrolatum in patient 1, such an approach appears not to be a feasible means to increase elimination. Owing to the small amount of TCDD measured in skin-surface material, as well as in the cyst contents and cerumen obtained from one patient, contamination of the environment and other persons appears highly unlikely.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0738
    Keywords: Key words Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins  ;   2 ; 3 ; 7 ; 8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin ; Polychlorinated dibenzofuranes ; Toxicokinetics ; Infant Human ; Adipose tissue ; Liver
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Contents of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) and of 16 further congeners – polychlorinated dibenzodioxins and dibenzofuranes (PCDD/PCDF) – were determined in lipids of adipose tissue and of livers of 3 stillborns and of 17 infants (0.43–44 weeks old) who died from sudden infant death syndrome. International toxic equivalents (I-TEq) calculated for the sum of TCDD together with all of the 16 congeners (1.55–29.63 ng/kg lipids of adipose tissue, n = 20; 2.05–57.73 ng/kg liver lipids, n = 19) were within the range of or lower than the values published for adults. TCDD concentrations in lipids of breast-fed infants were higher (0.38–4.1 ng/kg lipids of adipose tissue, n = 9; 0.49–3.9 ng/kg liver lipids, n = 8) compared to non breast-fed subjects (0.16–0.76 ng/kg lipids of adipose tissue, n = 8; 0.29–0.71 ng/kg liver lipids, n = 7). Neither I-TEq values nor TCDD concentrations exceeded values published for adults. Since even in stillborns PCDD/PCDF were found (I-TEq, 9.70–10.83 ng/kg lipids of adipose tissue, 6.17–8.83 ng/kg liver lipids; TCDD, 1.3–2.1 ng/kg lipids of adipose tissue, 0.76–1.5 ng/kg liver lipids; n = 3), transplacental exposure has to be deduced. All of the findings concerning TCDD concentrations in the organism become intelligible on the basis of a physiological toxicokinetic model which was developed to describe the body burden of TCDD for the entire human lifetime in dependence of TCDD uptake from contaminated nutrition. The model reflects sex and age dependent changes in the following parameters: body weight, volumes of liver, adipose and muscle tissue, food consumption, and excretion of faeces. TCDD is supposed to be taken up orally, to be distributed freely in lipids of the organism and to be eliminated unchanged by excretion in lipids of faeces as well as by metabolism in the liver. The model was used to predict the half-life of elimination of TCDD (4 months in newborns increasing to ∼5 years in adults) and concentrations of this compound in lipids of adipose tissue, blood, liver and faeces at different ages. Furthermore, the influence of breast-feeding on the TCDD burden of a mother, her milk and her child was simulated. The model was validated by means of own data gained in adipose tissue and livers of infants and also using a series of values measured by other authors in mother's milk and in tissues and faeces of infants and adults. Predictions as well as experimental findings demonstrate a distinct increase in the TCDD body burden of breast-fed infants. Generally, it can be concluded for the excretion of unchanged, non volatile, non protein bound highly lipophilic compounds that their half-life is short in infants (∼5 months) and increases to ∼10 years reached between 40 and 60 years of age.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Fresenius' Zeitschrift für analytische Chemie 345 (1993), S. 72-77 
    ISSN: 1618-2650
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary Six laboratories in four European countries (GER, GB, S, NL) have conducted an interlaboratory comparison study on the analysis of dioxins in cow's milk. The study comprised a cross comparison of standards and the analysis of the 2,3,7,8-substituted congeners of PCDD/Fs in three different milk pools (no spiking). Participants used their own procedures and methods for the determination of the fat content and PCDD/F levels in biological samples, all using non-polar gas chromatography and medium to high resolution mass spectrometry (RP=3.000–10.000). Quantification was performed by the use of a common quantification standard mixture of the native PCDD/Fs (4 labs) or the own quantification standards (2 labs). Within-laboratory reproducibilities for the determination of the major toxic congeners and the total TCDD toxicity equivalence (TE) level were between 2 and 16% (RSD) with a mean variation of 6% on TE basis. The interlaboratory comparison for TE values agreed within 10–17% (RSD) for TE values between 10.4 and 2.8 pg TE/g milk fat. Reliabilities of both participants and the common standards were difficult to assess and probably less good than expected. Differences in these standards were typically within 25% of expected concentrations up to 50% for some congeners by some laboratories.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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