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Seasonal Monitoring of Cardiovascular and Antiulcer Agents’ Concentrations in Stream Waters Encompassing a Capital City
Author(s) -
Renáta Varga,
Iván Somogyvári,
Zsuzsanna Eke,
Kornél Torkos
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of pharmaceutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-7818
pISSN - 2090-9918
DOI - 10.1155/2013/753928
Subject(s) - famotidine , tributary , environmental science , wastewater , sewage treatment , seasonality , atenolol , surface runoff , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental engineering , geography , ecology , biology , geology , cartography , geotechnical engineering , blood pressure , endocrinology , pharmacology
Nowadays monitoring pharmaceutical residues from surface waters is a widespread analytical task. Most of the studies are conducted from river waters or sewage treatment plants and mainly in Western Europe or North America. Such studies are seldom published from Eastern Europe, especially from stream waters, even though the prescription and consumption patterns of drugs as well as wastewater treatment procedures are very dissimilar. In Hungary the active substance of the most often prescribed drugs are cardiovascular and antiulcer agents. Hence in our study compounds belonging to these two groups were seasonally monitored in two main streams encompassing the Buda side of the Hungarian capital city and flowing into the Danube. To obtain data on the occurrence, fate, and seasonal variation of the compounds, samples were taken from altogether eleven points located near wastewater treatment plants and confluences. The results gave no identifiable pattern in the seasonal variation of concentrations but the contribution of the tributaries and wastewater treatment plants could be followed as expected. From the runoff corrected estuary concentrations the annual contribution of these streams to pharmaceutical pollution of the Danube could be estimated to be in excess of 1 kilogram for atenolol, famotidine, metoprolol, ranitidine, and sotalol.

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