Human exposure to phthalates via consumer products
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Abstract
Phthalate exposures in the general population and in subpopulations are ubiquitous and widely variable. Many consumer products contain specific members of this family of chemicals, including building materials, household furnishings, clothing, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, nutritional supplements, medical devices, dentures, children's toys, glow sticks, modelling clay, food packaging, automobiles, lubricants, waxes, cleaning materials and insecticides. Consumer products containing phthalates can result in human exposures through direct contact and use, indirectly through leaching into other products, or general environmental contamination. Historically, the diet has been considered the major source of phthalate…
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1,076
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- 100%
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Keywords
- Phthalate
- Cosmetics
- Diethyl phthalate
- Population
- Dibutyl phthalate
- Toxicology
- Environmental health
- Environmental chemistry
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