Health effects following subacute exposure to geogenic dust collected from active drainage surfaces (Nellis Dunes Recreation Area, Las Vegas, NV)
Author
DeWitt, Jamie C.; Buck, Brenda J.; Goossens, Dirk; Teng, Yuanxin; Pollard, James; McLaurin, Brett T.; Gerads, Russell; Keil, Deborah E.
Abstract
The specific health effects of directinhalation of fine minerogenic dusts generated by natural soil surfaces
remain poorly known and relatively little researched. To learn more about this exposure and its contribution
to human health effects, we surveyed surface sediment and characterized dust from the Nellis
Dunes Recreation Area (NDRA) in Clark County, Nevada, a popular off-road vehicle (ORV) recreational
site. Dry drainage systems at NDRA are commonly used as natural trail systems for ORV recreation; these
surfaces also are characterized by high concentrations of heavy metals. Geogenic dust with a median
diameter of 4.05 m, collected from drainage surfaces at NDRA contained a total elemental concentration
of aluminum (79,651 g/g), vanadium (100 g/g), chromium (54 g/g), manganese (753 g/g), iron
(33,266 g/g), cobalt(14 g/g), copper (37 g/g) zinc (135 g/g), arsenic (71 g/g), strontium (666 g/g),
cesium (15 g/g), lead (34 g/g), and uranium (54.9 g/g).Adultfemale B6C3F1 mice exposed via oropharyngeal
aspiration to 0.01–100 mg dust/kg body weight, four times, a week apart, for 28-days, were
evaluated for immuno- and neurotoxicological outcomes 24 h after the last exposure. Antigen-specific
IgM responses were dose-responsively suppressed at 0.1, 1.0, 10 and 100 mg/kg. Splenic lymphocytic
subpopulations, hematological and clinical chemistry parameters were affected. In brain tissue, antibodies
against NF-68, and GFAP were not affected, whereas IgM antibodies against MBP were reduced by
26.6% only in the highest dose group. A lowest observed adverse effect level (LOAEL) of 0.1 mg/kg/day
and a no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) of 0.01 mg/kg/day were derived based on the antigen
primary IgM responses after subacute exposure to this geogenic dust.
Date
2017-12-08
Citation:
APA:
DeWitt, Jamie C., & Buck, Brenda J., & Goossens, Dirk, & Teng, Yuanxin, & Pollard, James, & McLaurin, Brett T., & Gerads, Russell, & Keil, Deborah E.. (December 2017).
Health effects following subacute exposure to geogenic dust collected from active drainage surfaces (Nellis Dunes Recreation Area, Las Vegas, NV).
,
(),
-
. Retrieved from
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/6084
MLA:
DeWitt, Jamie C., and Buck, Brenda J., and Goossens, Dirk, and Teng, Yuanxin, and Pollard, James, and McLaurin, Brett T., and Gerads, Russell, and Keil, Deborah E..
"Health effects following subacute exposure to geogenic dust collected from active drainage surfaces (Nellis Dunes Recreation Area, Las Vegas, NV)". .
. (),
December 2017.
May 31, 2023.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/6084.
Chicago:
DeWitt, Jamie C. and Buck, Brenda J. and Goossens, Dirk and Teng, Yuanxin and Pollard, James and McLaurin, Brett T. and Gerads, Russell and Keil, Deborah E.,
"Health effects following subacute exposure to geogenic dust collected from active drainage surfaces (Nellis Dunes Recreation Area, Las Vegas, NV)," , no.
(December 2017),
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/6084 (accessed
May 31, 2023).
AMA:
DeWitt, Jamie C., Buck, Brenda J., Goossens, Dirk, Teng, Yuanxin, Pollard, James, McLaurin, Brett T., Gerads, Russell, Keil, Deborah E..
Health effects following subacute exposure to geogenic dust collected from active drainage surfaces (Nellis Dunes Recreation Area, Las Vegas, NV). .
December 2017;
():
.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/6084. Accessed
May 31, 2023.