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Implications of human pharmaceutical occurrence in the Sindian river of Taiwan: A strategic study of risk assessment
Author(s) -
Angela YuChen Lin,
Sri Chandana Panchangam,
Huan-Yo Chen
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of environmental monitoring
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1464-0333
pISSN - 1464-0325
DOI - 10.1039/b903880a
Subject(s) - naproxen , contamination , estrone , aquatic environment , environmental science , ketoprofen , environmental risk assessment , aquatic ecosystem , acetaminophen , risk assessment , environmental chemistry , chemistry , medicine , pharmacology , biology , ecology , alternative medicine , estrogen , computer security , pathology , computer science
Contamination of natural aquatic environments with human-use pharmaceuticals poses a significant potential threat to local ecosystems. However studies of the risk assessment of this contamination are limited, in part because currently the environmental concentration prediction is logistically and technically difficult to perform. In this study, 1) a strategic method to determine occurrence and risk of pharmaceutical compounds in an aquatic environment is proposed, and 2) this method is applied to study ten human-use pharmaceuticals in Taiwan's Sindian river, which traverses and supplies drinking water for Taipei, a major metropolitan center. In river-water samples collected over a three-week period, concentrations of NSAIDs (acetaminophen, diclofenac, ibuprofen, naproxen, and ketoprofen), steroids (estrone, 17alpha-ethinylestradiol and 17beta-estradiol), the anti-hypertensive agent propranolol, and the lipid regulator gemfibrozil were found at ng/L to microg/L levels; night-time concentrations were often doubled or even greater, compared to day-time levels. With the exception of the estrogens, predicted environmental concentrations (PECs) of the target pharmaceuticals agreed well with measured environmental concentrations (MECs).

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