Evaluation of pharmaceuticals and personal care products with emphasis on anthelmintics in human sanitary waste, sewage, hospital wastewater, livestock wastewater and receiving water
► This study is about PPCPs in sewage, wastewater and receiving water. ► Few surveys have globally reported on anthelmintics in wastewater and surface water. ► This is the comprehensive study on anthelmintics in wastewater and water environment. ► We evaluated the characteristic patterns of various...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of hazardous materials 2013-03, Vol.248-249, p.219-227 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | ► This study is about PPCPs in sewage, wastewater and receiving water. ► Few surveys have globally reported on anthelmintics in wastewater and surface water. ► This is the comprehensive study on anthelmintics in wastewater and water environment. ► We evaluated the characteristic patterns of various classes of PPCPs. ► This is the most comprehensive study worldwide.
We investigated 33 pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) with emphasis on anthelmintics and their metabolites in human sanitary waste treatment plants (HTPs), sewage treatment plants (STPs), hospital wastewater treatment plants (HWTPs), livestock wastewater treatment plants (LWTPs), river water and seawater. PPCPs showed the characteristic specific occurrence patterns according to wastewater sources. The LWTPs and HTPs showed higher levels (maximum 3000 times in influents) of anthelmintics than other wastewater treatment plants, indicating that livestock wastewater and human sanitary waste are one of principal sources of anthelmintics. Among anthelmintics, fenbendazole and its metabolites are relatively high in the LWTPs, while human anthelmintics such as albendazole and flubendazole are most dominant in the HTPs, STPs and HWTPs. The occurrence pattern of fenbendazole's metabolites in water was different from pharmacokinetics studies, showing the possibility of transformation mechanism other than the metabolism in animal bodies by some processes unknown to us. The river water and seawater are generally affected by the point sources, but the distribution patterns in some receiving water are slightly different from the effluent, indicating the influence of non-point sources. |
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ISSN: | 0304-3894 1873-3336 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2013.01.007 |