Estimation of Metal(oid)s Oral and Inhalation Bioavailability in Synthetic and Recycled Rubber Materials and Artificial Turf Using a Dialyzability-Based In-Vitro Approach

Bibliographic citation

Sánchez-Piñero, J., Longueira-Ordóñez, A., Turnes-Carou, I., Muniategui-Lorenzo, S., López-Mahía, P., Moreda-Piñeiro, J., 2026. Estimation of metal(oid)s oral and inhalation bioavailability in synthetic and recycled rubber materials and artificial turf using a dialyzability-based In-Vitro approach. Journal of Hazardous Materials 508, 141755. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2026.141755

Type of academic work

Academic degree

Abstract

[Abstract] Synthetic/recycled rubber materials are widely used in playgrounds, artificial turf infill, and synthetic tracks, but they may contain harmful substances, such as metal(oid)s, posing health risks through ingestion and inhalation. The use of such materials and artificial turf has raised increasing concern, and several studies have begun to investigate the pollutants potentially released into simulated fluids (in-vitro bioaccessibility) to provide a more realistic assessment of the associated health risks. In this context, the present study reports, the estimation of the oral and inhalation bioavailability of metal(oid)s (bioaccessible fraction that can potentially be absorbed into the bloodstream and pose a major health risk) in synthetic/recycled rubber materials and artificial turf, from public facilities and brand-new samples. To this end, an in-vitro oral and inhalation bioavailability approach was applied using synthetic human fluids and dialysis membrane filled with simulated human plasma to mimic absorption, with subsequent metal(oid)s quantification. Higher inhalation bioavailability ratios (1.0 – 37.4% for Mo and Rb, respectively) were observed compared to oral ones (0.35 – 22.7% for Fe and Sr, respectively). Regarding the rubber composition, samples made of ethylene propylene diene monomer showed higher metal(oid)s bioavailability ratios than those made of styrene-butadiene-styrene, suggesting distinct metal(oid)s-polymer interactions influencing their release. Non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic hazard indexes via ingestion and inhalation were assessed using metal(oid) oral and inhalation bioavailable concentrations based on the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment exposure model. The results suggested no significant carcinogenic or non-carcinogenic risks for several scenarios, including children, adults, coaches, and bystanders from both exposition routes.

Description

Financiado para publicación en acceso aberto: Universidade da Coruña/CISUG

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International
Attribution 4.0 International

Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International