Recreational exposure to low concentrations of microcystins during an algal bloom in a small lake

Backer, LC; Carmichael, W; Kirkpatrick, B; Williams, C; Irvin, M; Zhou, Yue; Johnson, TB; Nierenberg, K; Hill, VR; Kieszak, SM; Cheng, YS

HERO ID

2591739

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2008

Language

English

PMID

18728733

HERO ID 2591739
In Press No
Year 2008
Title Recreational exposure to low concentrations of microcystins during an algal bloom in a small lake
Authors Backer, LC; Carmichael, W; Kirkpatrick, B; Williams, C; Irvin, M; Zhou, Yue; Johnson, TB; Nierenberg, K; Hill, VR; Kieszak, SM; Cheng, YS
Journal Marine Drugs
Volume 6
Issue 2
Page Numbers 389-406
Abstract We measured microcystins in blood from people at risk for swallowing water or inhaling spray while swimming, water skiing, jet skiing, or boating during an algal bloom. We monitored water samples from a small lake as a Microcystis aeruginosa bloom developed. We recruited 97 people planning recreational activities in that lake and seven others who volunteered to recreate in a nearby bloom-free lake. We conducted our field study within a week of finding a 10-mu g/L microcystin concentration. We analyzed water, air, and human blood samples for water quality, potential human pathogens, algal taxonomy, and microcystin concentrations. We interviewed study participants for demographic and current health symptom information. Water samples were assayed for potential respiratory viruses (adenoviruses and enteroviruses), but none were detected. We did find low concentrations of Escherichia coli, indicating fecal contamination. We found low levels of microcystins (2 mu g/L to 5 mu g/L) in the water and (< 0.1 ng/m(3)) in the aerosol samples. Blood levels of microcystins for all participants were below the limit of detection(0.147 mu g/L). Given this low exposure level, study participants reported no symptom increases following recreational exposure to microcystins. This is the first study to report that water-based recreational activities can expose people to very low concentrations of aerosol-borne microcystins; we recently conducted another field study to assess exposures to higher concentrations of these algal toxins.
Doi 10.3390/md20080018
Pmid 18728733
Wosid WOS:000257202100015
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Scopus URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-46349092473&doi=10.3390%2fmd6020389&partnerID=40&md5=8123dd22bf79dd4ac6e163c02ade25ae
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword aerosol exposures; blue-green algae; cyanobacteria; microcystins; Microcystis aeruginosa; waterborne exposures