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Assessment of hair and bone accumulation of beryllium by mice exposed to contaminated dusts
Authors:Katherine Drolet‐Vives  Joseph Zayed  Sébastien Sauvé
Institution:1. Department of Chemistry, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.;2. Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, and GRIS (Interdisciplinary Health Research Group), Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Abstract:This study looks at the accumulation of Be in the hair and bones of mice to understand both the use of hair as a bioindicator of exposure to Be and accumulation in bones as a means to evaluate the translocation of Be. We exposed two groups of mice (C3H/HeJ) to 250 µg m?3 of two different particles sizes of Be metal (fine and intermediate; Be‐F and Be‐I) during 3 weeks of nose‐only inhalation exposure. A control group was exposed to HEPA‐filtered air. Mice were sacrificed either 1 or 3 weeks after the end of exposure. Mice were shaved and the bones were extracted. For washed hair, the results of mice sacrificed one week after the end of exposure were 8.3 ± 1.4 µg kg?1 hair for the control group, 114 ± 42 µg kg?1 hair for the Be‐I group, and 159 ± 65 µg kg?1 hair for the Be‐F group. Results for Be‐F mice sacrificed 3 weeks after the end of exposure showed an average Be concentration in washed hair of 419 ± 100 µg kg?1, thus suggesting that excretion of Be in hair increases with time. Be concentration in bones was 6 ± 3 µg kg?1 dry bone tissues for the control group, compared with 24 ± 7 µg kg?1 for Be‐I and 34 ± 6 or 43 ± 8 µg kg?1 for Be‐F in mice sacrificed 1 or 3 weeks after the end of exposure. These results demonstrate the potential of using hair and bone as bioindicators of Be exposure. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:beryllium  mouse hair  mouse bone  ICP‐AES  inhalation exposure
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