Fluoride in Iranian Drinking Water Resources: a Systematic Review, Meta-analysis and Non-carcinogenic Risk Assessment

A systematic review, meta-analysis, and non-carcinogenic risk considering fluoride content of drinking water resources of 31 provinces of Iran among some international databases such as Science Direct, Scopus, PubMed, and national databases including SID and Irandoc (2011 to July 2017) were conducte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological trace element research 2019-04, Vol.188 (2), p.261-273
Hauptverfasser: Keramati, Hassan, Miri, Ali, Baghaei, Mehdi, Rahimizadeh, Aziz, Ghorbani, Raheb, Fakhri, Yadolah, Bay, Abotaleb, Moradi, Masoud, Bahmani, Zohreh, Ghaderpoori, Mansour, Mousavi Khaneghah, Amin
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container_end_page 273
container_issue 2
container_start_page 261
container_title Biological trace element research
container_volume 188
creator Keramati, Hassan
Miri, Ali
Baghaei, Mehdi
Rahimizadeh, Aziz
Ghorbani, Raheb
Fakhri, Yadolah
Bay, Abotaleb
Moradi, Masoud
Bahmani, Zohreh
Ghaderpoori, Mansour
Mousavi Khaneghah, Amin
description A systematic review, meta-analysis, and non-carcinogenic risk considering fluoride content of drinking water resources of 31 provinces of Iran among some international databases such as Science Direct, Scopus, PubMed, and national databases including SID and Irandoc (2011 to July 2017) were conducted. In this context, 10 articles (40 studies) with 1706 samples were included in meta-analyses and risk assessment studies. The pooled concentration of fluoride in the cold, mild, and warm weather provinces were calculated as 0.39 mg/L (95% CI 0.32–0.48 mg/L), 0.52 (95% CI 0.43–0.61 mg/L), and 0.75 (95% CI 0.56–0.94 mg/L), respectively. The pooled concentration of fluoride in Iranian drinking water resources was 0.51 (95% CI 0.45–0.57 mg/L). The minimum and maximum concentrations of fluoride content were related to Kermanshah (0.19 mg/L) and Kerman (1.13 mg/L) provinces, respectively. The HQ of fluoride in the children and adults were 0.462 and 0.077, respectively as children are more vulnerable than adults. The HQ for children and adults was lower than 1 value. Therefore, there is no considerable non-carcinogenic risk for consumers due to drinking water in Iran. Although the non-carcinogenic of fluoride in drinking water was not significant, fluoride entry from other sources, such as food or inhalation, could endanger the health of the residents of Kerman and Bushehr provinces.
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subjects Adult
Adults
Biochemistry
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biotechnology
Carcinogens
Chemical contaminants
Children
Cold
Dental fluorosis
Drinking water
Drinking Water - chemistry
Drinking Water - standards
Engineering
Environmental Exposure - analysis
Environmental health
Fluoridation
Fluorides
Fluorides - analysis
Food
Food sources
Health risk assessment
Health risks
Humans
Inhalation
Iran
Life Sciences
Medical research
Meta-analysis
Monte Carlo simulation
Nutrition
Oncology
Provinces
Public health
Research centers
Resources
Respiration
Risk analysis
Risk Assessment
Science
Systematic review
Water Pollutants, Chemical - analysis
Water resources
Weather
title Fluoride in Iranian Drinking Water Resources: a Systematic Review, Meta-analysis and Non-carcinogenic Risk Assessment
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