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Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans.
Power sanding exterior paint is a common practice during repainting of old houses in New Orleans, Louisiana, that triggers lead poisoning and releases more than Pb. In this study we quantified the Pb, zinc, cadmium, manganese, nickel, copper, cobalt, chromium, and vanadium in exterior paint samples...
Autores principales: | , , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
2001
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240450/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11673129 |
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author | Mielke, H W Powell, E T Shah, A Gonzales, C R Mielke, P W |
author_facet | Mielke, H W Powell, E T Shah, A Gonzales, C R Mielke, P W |
author_sort | Mielke, H W |
collection | PubMed |
description | Power sanding exterior paint is a common practice during repainting of old houses in New Orleans, Louisiana, that triggers lead poisoning and releases more than Pb. In this study we quantified the Pb, zinc, cadmium, manganese, nickel, copper, cobalt, chromium, and vanadium in exterior paint samples collected from New Orleans homes (n = 31). We used interior dust wipes to compare two exterior house-painting projects. House 1 was measured in response to the plight of a family after a paint contractor power sanded all exterior paint from the weatherboards. The Pb content (approximately 130,000 microg Pb/g) was first realized when the family pet died; the children were hospitalized, the family was displaced, and cleanup costs were high. To determine the quantity of dust generated by power sanding and the benefits of reducing Pb-contaminated dust, we tested a case study house (house 2) for Pb (approximately 90,000 microg/g) before the project was started; the house was then dry scraped and the paint chips were collected. Although the hazards of Pb-based paints are well known, there are other problems as well, because other toxic metals exist in old paints. If house 2 had been power sanded to bare wood like house 1, the repainting project would have released as dust about 7.4 kg Pb, 3.5 kg Zn, 9.7 g Cd, 14.8 g Cu, 8.8 g Mn, 1.5 g Ni, 5.4 g Co, 2.4 g Cr, and 0.3 g V. The total tolerable daily intake (TTDI) for a child under 6 years of age is 6 microg Pb from all sources. Converting 7.4 kg Pb to this scale is vexing--more than 1 billion (10(9)) times the TTDI. Also for perspective, the one-time release of 7.4 x 10(9) microg of Pb dust from sanding compares to 50 x 10(9) microg of Pb dust emitted annually per 0.1 mile (0.16 km) from street traffic during the peak use of leaded gasoline. In this paper, we broaden the discussion to include an array of metals in paint and underscore the need and possibilities for curtailing the release of metal dust. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-1240450 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2001 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-12404502005-11-08 Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. Mielke, H W Powell, E T Shah, A Gonzales, C R Mielke, P W Environ Health Perspect Research Article Power sanding exterior paint is a common practice during repainting of old houses in New Orleans, Louisiana, that triggers lead poisoning and releases more than Pb. In this study we quantified the Pb, zinc, cadmium, manganese, nickel, copper, cobalt, chromium, and vanadium in exterior paint samples collected from New Orleans homes (n = 31). We used interior dust wipes to compare two exterior house-painting projects. House 1 was measured in response to the plight of a family after a paint contractor power sanded all exterior paint from the weatherboards. The Pb content (approximately 130,000 microg Pb/g) was first realized when the family pet died; the children were hospitalized, the family was displaced, and cleanup costs were high. To determine the quantity of dust generated by power sanding and the benefits of reducing Pb-contaminated dust, we tested a case study house (house 2) for Pb (approximately 90,000 microg/g) before the project was started; the house was then dry scraped and the paint chips were collected. Although the hazards of Pb-based paints are well known, there are other problems as well, because other toxic metals exist in old paints. If house 2 had been power sanded to bare wood like house 1, the repainting project would have released as dust about 7.4 kg Pb, 3.5 kg Zn, 9.7 g Cd, 14.8 g Cu, 8.8 g Mn, 1.5 g Ni, 5.4 g Co, 2.4 g Cr, and 0.3 g V. The total tolerable daily intake (TTDI) for a child under 6 years of age is 6 microg Pb from all sources. Converting 7.4 kg Pb to this scale is vexing--more than 1 billion (10(9)) times the TTDI. Also for perspective, the one-time release of 7.4 x 10(9) microg of Pb dust from sanding compares to 50 x 10(9) microg of Pb dust emitted annually per 0.1 mile (0.16 km) from street traffic during the peak use of leaded gasoline. In this paper, we broaden the discussion to include an array of metals in paint and underscore the need and possibilities for curtailing the release of metal dust. 2001-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1240450/ /pubmed/11673129 Text en |
spellingShingle | Research Article Mielke, H W Powell, E T Shah, A Gonzales, C R Mielke, P W Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. |
title | Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. |
title_full | Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. |
title_fullStr | Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. |
title_full_unstemmed | Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. |
title_short | Multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in New Orleans. |
title_sort | multiple metal contamination from house paints: consequences of power sanding and paint scraping in new orleans. |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240450/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11673129 |
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