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Enkhjargal Altangerel 1 Article
Environmental health survey for children residing near mining areas in South Gobi, Mongolia
Ulziikhishig Surenbaatar, Byoung-gwon Kim, Jeong-Wook Seo, Hyoun-Ju Lim, Jung-Yeon Kwon, Min-Kyung Kang, Enkhjargal Altangerel, Tsogtbaatar Byambaa, Suvd Batbaatar, Oyunchimeg Myagmardorj, Chul-Woo Lee, Young-Seoub Hong
Ann Occup Environ Med 2021;33:e10.   Published online March 31, 2021
DOI: https://doi.org/10.35371/aoem.2021.33.e10
AbstractAbstract PDFPubReaderePub
Background

We evaluated the level and factors of heavy metal exposure to children residing in the Togttsetsii, Khanbogd, and Bayandalai soums of South Gobi province, Mongolia.

Methods

A total of 118 children aged 9–12 years were surveyed, and the level of heavy metal exposure in their bodies was investigated. Exposure was investigated by measuring concentrations of heavy metals such as cadmium, lead, and mercury in the blood; mercury concentration in the hair; and total arsenic in the urine.

Results

Blood cadmium concentration had geometric averages of 0.16 µg/L in the children from Bayandalai, 0.15 µg/L Tsogttsetsii, and 0.16 µg/L Khanbogd. Blood lead concentration showed a relatively higher geometric average of 7.42 µg/dL in the children from Bayandalai compared to 4.78 µg/dL and 5.15 µg/dL in those from Tsogttsetsii and Khanbogd, respectively. While blood mercury concentration was the highest in the children from Bayandalai, with a value of 0.38 µg/L, those from Tsogttsetsii and Khanbogd had similar concentrations of 0.29 µg/L and 0.29 µg/L, respectively. Hair mercury concentration was the highest in the children from Bayandalai, with a value of 78 µg/g, a particularly significant difference, with a concentration of 0.50 µg/g in those from Khanbogd. Urine arsenic concentration was the highest in the children from Khanbogd, with a value of 36.93 µg/L; it was 26.11 µg/L in those from Bayandalai and 23.89 µg/L in those from Tsogttsetsii.

Conclusions

The high blood lead concentration of children in Bayandalai was judged to be due to other factors in addition to mine exposure; the reason why blood and hair mercury concentration was higher in children from Bayandalai may have been due to exposure to many small-scale gold mines in the area. In the case of Khanbogd, it was estimated that the high arsenic level in urine was caused by the effect of mines.


Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
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    Scientific Reports.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
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    Journal of Korean Medical Science.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Blood Lead Monitoring in a Former Mining Area in Euskirchen, Germany—Volunteers across the Entire Population
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    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2022; 19(10): 6083.     CrossRef
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