Abstract

ABSTRACT Scalp hair samples of traffic control personnel (n = 71, ages between 25 to 45 years) were analyzed for 11 selected metals by using an Inductively Coupled Argon Plasma Atomic Emission (ICP-AE) technique using nitric acid–perchloric acid based wet digestion method. The observed order of mean concentrations (μ g/g, dry weight) of the metals, in washed hair samples, was: Ca > Mg > Zn > Fe > Pb > Cu > Ni > Mn > Cr > Cd > Co, with corresponding metal levels at 1042.2, 182.4, 169.7, 13.6, 12.4, 11.1, 2.7, 1.9, 1.9, 0.8, and 0.7 μ g/g, respectively. Most of the unwashed samples exhibited 10–15% higher metal levels compared with those in washed samples. A positive metal-to-metal correlation (p < 0.01) was observed for the metal pairs: Ca-Mg (r = 0.737), Pb-Cr (r = 0.441), and Cu-Zn (0.385). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) extracted 6 factors as metals origin using varimax normalized rotation commutatively representing more than 76% of the total variance. Cluster Analysis (CA) showed five strong clusters of selected metals in the hair of the subjects: Age-Exposure, Ca-Mg, Cd-Fe-Mn, Pb-Cr, and Cu-Zn. The results of the current study were compared with those for two other occupationally exposed groups, metal arc welders and autodrivers, using published literature values. The traffic controllers in our study generally, with the exception of Cu, exhibited lower levels of metals in hair samples than did autodrivers and arc welders.

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