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Original Articles

Contaminated Soils (II): In Vitro Dermal Absorption of Nickel (Ni-63) and Mercury (Hg-203) in Human Skin

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Pages 551-559 | Received 12 Oct 2008, Accepted 24 Nov 2008, Published online: 06 Mar 2009
 

Abstract

Dermal absorption of heavy metal soil contaminants was tested in vitro with chloride salts of radioactive nickel (Ni-63) and mercury (Hg-203). Aqueous soil suspensions, spiked with either Ni-63 or Hg-203, were applied to fresh viable human breast skin tissue in Bronaugh diffusion cells perfused with Hanks HEPES buffered (pH 7.4) receptor containing 4% bovine serum albumin (BSA). Receptor fractions were collected every 6 h for 24 h when skin was soap washed. Tests were conducted concurrently in triplicate with and without soil for each skin specimen. Mean percent dermal absorption including the skin depot for Ni-63 was 1 and 22.8% with and without soil, respectively, while for Hg-203, values of 46.6 and 78.3% were obtained. Excluding the skin depot and considering only absorption in receptor, there was 0.5 and 1.8% absorption of Ni-63 with and without soil, respectively, and 1.5 and 1.4% for Hg-203. The potential bioavailability of the skin depot is discussed in relation to dermal exposure to these metals in contaminated soil.

We thank Dr. Michael Bell and the staff of the Ottawa Hospital for human skin surgical waste tissue. This project was approved by the Research Ethics Boards of the Ottawa Hospital and Health Canada. We are indebted to the Bureau of Risk and Impact Assessment of Health Canada for internal funding of our project. We are grateful to Jamie Nakai and Jiping Zhu for reviewing the article before publication.

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