2007
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jes.7500614
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Creatinine corrections for estimating children's and adult's pesticide intake doses in equilibrium with urinary pesticide and creatinine concentrations

Abstract: A urine contaminant concentration per se has uncertain meaning for human health because of dilution by hydration. However, the estimation of the health-related daily intake dose of pollutant (mg/kg/day) that equilibrates with a spot urinary concentration of a pesticide residue or metabolite, or other analyte, can be made using creatinine-corrected toxicant levels (mg analyte/mg creatinine) multiplied by an estimate of the subjects' expected creatinine excretion rates (mg creatinine/kg/day). The objective was t… Show more

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Cited by 151 publications
(149 citation statements)
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“…Although substantial effort has been devoted to development of equations for prediction of creatinine excretion rates based on age, gender, body weight, and height (Mage et al 16,17 ), less information is available about within-individual variation in creatinine excretion rates. In the CDC data set, the coefficients of variation (CV) across the eight individuals for creatinine excretion rate in mg/h on a sample-by sample basis ranged from 24% to 50%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although substantial effort has been devoted to development of equations for prediction of creatinine excretion rates based on age, gender, body weight, and height (Mage et al 16,17 ), less information is available about within-individual variation in creatinine excretion rates. In the CDC data set, the coefficients of variation (CV) across the eight individuals for creatinine excretion rate in mg/h on a sample-by sample basis ranged from 24% to 50%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this analysis, we have estimated perchlorate intake distributions from the NHANES data in a manner similar to that employed by Blount et al (2006) in analyzing the 2001-2002 data. Differences in our approach include: (1) we have estimated distributions for reproductive-age women instead of for all adult females, and (2) we have used an updated approach to adjust for differences in 24-h creatinine excretion which takes into account racial differences in excretion rates (Mage et al, 2008). In addition, we have generated two separate estimates of perchlorate intake, one based on the 2001-2002 data previously analyzed by Blount et al (2006) and another based on data from the 2003-2004 sampling rounds.…”
Section: Perchlorate Intake Estimates Based On Nhanes Urinary Excretimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When measured in units of mass/volume in the urine it is subjected to the variation of daily volume of urine eliminated by the person which can vary with hydration status. However the daily mass of creatinine excreted by a person is considered to be approximately constant [18,21]. Therefore it is assumed that the concentration, with creatinine correction, is a more reliable measurement, despite of the variations with different age groups, ethnicities etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%