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. 2011 Jan;71(1-2):25-32.

Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB) carcinogenicity with special emphasis on airborne PCBs

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Polychlorinated Biphenyl (PCB) carcinogenicity with special emphasis on airborne PCBs

Larry W Robertson et al. Gefahrst Reinhalt Luft. 2011 Jan.

Abstract

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are industrial chemicals used in various applications requiring chemical stabilityand have now become widely dispersed. Their characteristics of persistence, low water/higher lipid solubility, contribute to their ability to bioconcentrate and bioaccumulate. Traditionally PCBs have been regulated as food contaminants and the general population is primarily exposed by that route. PCBs in foodstuffs are generally higher chlorinated, resistant to metabolic breakdown, and elicit toxic changes that are thought to be predominantly receptor/parent PCB-driven. But for certain occupational exposures, and for those persons residing or working in contaminated buildings, and in large cities, an inhalation route of exposure may predominate. Airborne PCBs are, in contrast to foodborne PCBs, lower chlorinated, more volatile, and subject to metabolic attack. In this review, we have explored (geno-) toxic manifestations of PCBs typical of those found in air. Here metabolic conversion of the parent PCB to hydroxylated and other metabolic progeny appear to play a dominant role, especially in genotoxicity. We should be cognizant of the impact of exposures to airborne PCBs for those individuals who are occupationally exposed, for persons living near contaminated sites, for those who work or go to school in contaminated buildings, and especially cognizant of the young, the socio-economically disadvantaged and medically-underserved or nutritionally-deficient populations.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Average PCB concentration in Chicago air for the calendar year 2007. Data are depicted as a weight percentage, and are taken from a study by Zhao et al, 2010 [20].

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