Frontiers in Environmental Science (Dec 2022)

Influential factors of urinary arsenic levels in the population residing close to one heavy-industrial area in Taiwan - A case study

  • Acharee Kaewlaoyoong,
  • Shih-Ting Huang,
  • Shih-Ting Huang,
  • Shu-Li Wang,
  • Shu-Li Wang,
  • Chien-Wen Sun,
  • Jia-Jen Chen,
  • Chao-Hung Kuo,
  • Chao-Hung Kuo,
  • Chih-Hsing Hung,
  • Chih-Hsing Hung,
  • Chih-Hsing Hung,
  • Szu-Chia Chen,
  • Szu-Chia Chen,
  • Szu-Chia Chen,
  • Ching-Chao Liang,
  • Hsiao-Wen Tsai,
  • Chia-Fang Wu,
  • Chia-Fang Wu,
  • Wen-Yi Lin,
  • Wen-Yi Lin,
  • Ming-Tsang Wu,
  • Ming-Tsang Wu,
  • Ming-Tsang Wu,
  • Ming-Tsang Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2022.1058408
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The public in southwestern Taiwan’s Kaohsiung City have expressed concern over risk of arsenic (As) to people living in six villages of that city nearby a coastal heavy-industrial area. To investigate, we first analyzed urinary total As (TAs) levels in 328 adult subjects from the Nutrition and Health Survey in Taiwan in 2005-2008 (NAHSIT 2005-8). We found the top three highest median urinary TAs levels in residents from the Penghu islands (150.90 µg/L, n = 21) and the upper northern region (78.04 µg/L, n = 56) and the southern region (75.21 µg/L, n = 33) of Taiwan. Then, urinary TAs levels in 1,801 and 1,695 voluntary adult residents of the above-mentioned six villages in 2016 and 2018 respectively were compared with those from the top three highest TAs levels of NAHSIT 2005-8. Median urinary As levels were 84.60 µg/L in 2016 and 73.40 µg/L in 2018, similar to those in the southern region of Taiwan, but far below those in the Penghu islands (p < 0.05). Finally, in 2020, we interviewed 116 healthy adult residents from the same six villages and analyzed one-spot urine samples of total inorganic-related As (TiAs), a summation of As3+, As5+, monomethylarsonic acid, and dimethylarsinic acid. Subjects consuming seafood 2 days before urine sampling (n = 15) were significantly higher TiAs levels than those not (n = 101, p = 0.028). These findings suggest that seafood consumption is probably the main source of urinary TAs and TiAs in people residing close to that coastal heavy-industrial area.

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