New
Jersey residents' toenail clippings to be tested for carcinogen
Scientists
plan to check toenail clippings from hundreds of people in Garfield,
New Jersey, to determine if residents were exposed to a toxic metal
linked to lung cancer.
26
March, 2013
Chromium,
the metal made infamous in California by environmental activist Erin
Brockovich, has leaked from the now-demolished EC Electroplating Inc.
factory and polluted groundwater.
Located
12 miles west of New York City, the area is on the federal Superfund
list of hazardous waste sites. Some 30,000 people live in Garfield.
"Concentrations
in the groundwater, et cetera, are very high," said Judith
Zelikoff, a professor of environmental medicine at the New York
University School of Medicine, told Reuters on Monday.
In
1983 more than 3,600 gallons (13,600 liters) of a chemical solution
containing chromium were discharged from a tank at the factory,
according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
The
solution got into the groundwater, which flows toward the Passaic
River, about 2,500 feet west of the site.
The
plume is about three quarters of a mile long and slightly more than
an eighth of a mile wide, said Rich Puvogel, a project manager with
the EPA.
Detecting
chromium in groundwater, soil and homes does not necessarily mean
that people were exposed, Zelikoff said.
"We
hope to be able to relieve their anxiety," said Zelikoff, noting
that scientists will begin recruiting volunteers for the toenail
clippings within the next three weeks.
Toenails
grow slowly and may help to detect chronic exposure, she said.
Very
high levels of chromium were found at the factory - approximately
80,000 parts per billion, Puvogel said. Downstream from the site, the
levels drop off by several orders of magnitude, he said.
New
Jersey sets a limit of 70 parts per billion.
The
residents' exposure would have come from inhaling or touching
chromium that had seeped into their basements, especially during
flooding.
"When
the water dries, it also leaves a chromium dust residue,"
Zelikoff said.
Inhaled
chromium is a carcinogen that increases the risk of lung cancer,
according to the EPA.
Scientists,
who became aware of the contamination last year, want to test up to
250 residents, including some who live directly above the plume and a
control group living at least three miles (five km) away, Zelikoff
said.
Residents
who agree to submit toenail clippings will receive kits containing
stainless-steel clippers and instructions. They must be between 18
and 65 and cannot have taken chromium supplements or be smokers.
Last
year the EPA removed more than 753 containers and drums of industrial
waste from the factory and 6,100 gallons (23,000 liters) of
chromium-contaminated water. The building was demolished in October.
Next
week the agency will start sampling the soil at the site to determine
what sources of contamination remain.
The
city's drinking water comes from a different source and is not
contaminated.
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