Consumption of Brown Rice: A Potential Pathway for Arsenic Exposure in Rural Bengal

Dipti Halder(KTH Royal Institute of Technology), Subhamoy Bhowmick(University of Kalyani), Ashis Biswas(University of Kalyani), Ujjal Mandal(University of Kalyani), Jerome O. Nriagu(University of Michigan–Ann Arbor), Debendra Nath Guha Mazumdar(Calcutta Research Group), Debashis Chatterjee(University of Kalyani), Prosun Bhattacharya(KTH Royal Institute of Technology)
Environmental Science & Technology
February 22, 2012
Cited by 76

Abstract

This study assesses the arsenic (As) accumulation in different varieties of rice grain, that people in rural Bengal mostly prefer for daily consumption, to estimate the potential risk of dietary As exposure through rice intake. The rice samples have been classified according to their average length (L) and L to breadth (B) ratio into four categories, such as short-bold (SB), medium-slender (MS), long-slender (LS), and extra-long slender (ELS). The brown colored rice samples fall into the SB, MS, or LS categories; while all Indian Basmati (white colored) are classified as ELS. The study indicates that the average accumulation of As in rice grain increases with a decrease of grain size (ELS: 0.04; LS: 0.10; MS: 0.16; and SB: 0.33 mg kg(-1)), however people living in the rural villages mostly prefer brown colored SB type of rice because of its lower cost. For the participants consuming SB type of brown rice, the total daily intake of inorganic As (TDI-iAs) in 29% of the cases exceeds the previous WHO recommended provisional tolerable daily intake value (2.1 μg day(-1) kg(-1) BW), and in more than 90% of cases, the As content in the drinking water equivalent to the inorganic As intake from rice consumption (C(W,eqv)) exceeds the WHO drinking water guideline of 10 μg L(-1). This study further demonstrates that participants in age groups 18-30 and 51-65 yrs are the most vulnerable to the potential health threat of dietary As exposure compared to participants of age group 31-50 yrs, because of higher amounts of brown rice consumption patterns and lower BMI.


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