Zhang Y, Price G W, Jamieson R, Burton D, Khosravi K
Department of Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Department of Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Chemosphere. 2017 May;174:628-637. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.02.027. Epub 2017 Feb 6.
Non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are widely used pharmaceutical products with analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects that are consistently detected in municipal wastewater systems and in municipal biosolids. Land application of biosolids and irrigation with reclaimed wastewater introduces these compounds into agricultural environments, which is an emerging issue of concern for ecosystem health. In this study, the sorption-desorption behaviour of four commonly consumed NSAIDs, including naproxen (NPX), ibuprofen (IBU), ketoprofen (KTF), and diclofenac (DCF), was examined in a loam textured soil exposed to either an individual-compound or a mixture of the four NSAIDs. The proportion of NSAIDs adsorbed to the soil in the mixture-compound system was 72%, 55%, 50% and 45%, for diclofenac, naproxen, ketoprofen, and ibuprofen, respectively, and differed slightly from the individual compound adsorption. Diclofenac displayed strong sorption and low desorption in both the individual-compound and mixture-compound systems. Naproxen and ibuprofen exhibited significant differences between the adsorption isotherms of the individual-compound and mixture-compound systems. Results of this study highlight differences in the sorption behaviour of NSAIDs, when present as mixtures, possibly through multilayer bonding effects or complexation with cationic metals or organo-clays from the soil. Soil organic matter (SOM) may have played a role in determining some of the interactions between the compounds but other factors associated with the mixture-compound system, such as cation bridging or multilayer cooperative adsorption. Desorption data suggests that the mechanisms involved in binding NSAIDs to the soil surface are also influence by the presence of other compounds in a mixture. A reduction in desorption was observed for all four NSAIDs in the mixture-compound system relative to the individual-compound system, but were greatest for naproxen and ibuprofen. The sorption-desorption hysteresis increased for naproxen and ibuprofen in the mixture-compound system. This study suggests that cooperative adsorption plays a role in the interaction of NSAIDs when present as mixtures rather than as individual compounds.
非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)是广泛使用的具有止痛和抗炎作用的药品,在城市污水系统和城市生物固体中持续被检测到。生物固体的土地施用和再生水灌溉将这些化合物引入农业环境,这是一个新兴的、关乎生态系统健康的问题。在本研究中,考察了四种常用非甾体抗炎药,包括萘普生(NPX)、布洛芬(IBU)、酮洛芬(KTF)和双氯芬酸(DCF),在壤土质地土壤中单独化合物或四种非甾体抗炎药混合物作用下的吸附-解吸行为。在混合化合物系统中,双氯芬酸、萘普生、酮洛芬和布洛芬吸附到土壤中的比例分别为72%、55%、50%和45%,与单独化合物吸附情况略有不同。双氯芬酸在单独化合物和混合化合物系统中均表现出强吸附和低解吸。萘普生和布洛芬在单独化合物和混合化合物系统的吸附等温线之间存在显著差异。本研究结果突出了非甾体抗炎药以混合物形式存在时吸附行为的差异,可能是通过多层键合效应或与土壤中的阳离子金属或有机粘土络合。土壤有机质(SOM)可能在决定化合物之间的一些相互作用中发挥了作用,但与混合化合物系统相关的其他因素,如阳离子桥连或多层协同吸附。解吸数据表明,混合物中其他化合物的存在也会影响非甾体抗炎药与土壤表面结合的机制。相对于单独化合物系统,混合化合物系统中所有四种非甾体抗炎药的解吸均减少,但萘普生和布洛芬最为明显。混合化合物系统中萘普生和布洛芬的吸附-解吸滞后增加。本研究表明,协同吸附在非甾体抗炎药以混合物而非单独化合物形式存在时的相互作用中起作用。