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Groundwater arsenic contamination and its health effects in India
Authors:Dipankar Chakraborti  Mohammad Mahmudur Rahman  Bhaskar Das  Amit Chatterjee  Dipankar Das  Biswajit Nayak  Arup Pal  Uttam Kumar Chowdhury  Sad Ahmed  Bhajan Kumar Biswas  Mrinal Kumar Sengupta  Md Amir Hossain  Gautam Samanta  M M Roy  Rathindra Nath Dutta  Khitish Chandra Saha  Subhas Chandra Mukherjee  Shyamapada Pati  Probir Bijoy Kar  Adreesh Mukherjee  Manoj Kumar
Institution:1.School of Environmental Studies,Jadavpur University,Kolkata,India;2.Global Centre for Environmental Remediation (GCER), Faculty of Science,The University of Newcastle,Callaghan,Australia;3.Department of Environment and Water Resources Engineering, School of Civil and Chemical Engineering (SCALE),VIT-University,Vellore,India;4.Retired Professor, Department of Orthopaedics,Medical College,Kolkata,India;5.Retired Professor Department of Dermatology, Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research,SSKM Hospital,Kolkata,India;6.Retired Professor of Dermatology,School of Tropical Medicine,Kolkata,India;7.Retired Professor, Department of Neurology,Medical College,Kolkata,India;8.Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology,Calcutta National Medical College,Kolkata,India;9.Surgical Oncologist, Barasat Cancer Research and Welfare Centre,Kolkata,India;10.Department of Neurology, Bangur Institute of Neurosciences and IPGME&R,SSKM Hospital,Kolkata,India;11.Department of Environmental Science, School of Earth, Environment & Space Studies,Central University of Haryana,Mahendergarh,India
Abstract:During a 28-year field survey in India (1988–2016), groundwater arsenic contamination and its health effects were registered in the states of West Bengal, Jharkhand, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh in the Ganga River flood plain, and the states of Assam and Manipur in the flood plain of Brahamaputra and Imphal rivers. Groundwater of Rajnandgaon village in Chhattisgarh state, which is not in a flood plain, is also arsenic contaminated. More than 170,000 tubewell water samples from the affected states were analyzed and half of the samples had arsenic >10 μg/L (maximum concentration 3,700 μg/L). Chronic exposure to arsenic through drinking water causes various health problems, like dermal, neurological, reproductive and pregnancy effects, cardiovascular effects, diabetes mellitus, diseases of the respiratory and gastrointestinal systems, and cancers, typically involving the skin, lungs, liver, bladder, etc. About 4.5% of the 8,000 children from arsenic-affected villages of affected states were registered with mild to moderate arsenical skin lesions. In the preliminary survey, more than 10,000 patients were registered with different types of arsenic-related signs and symptoms, out of more than 100,000 people screened from affected states. Elevated levels of arsenic were also found in biological samples (urine, hair, nails) of the people living in affected states. The study reveals that the population who had severe arsenical skin lesions may suffer from multiple Bowens/cancers in the long term. Some unusual symptoms, such as burning sensation, skin itching and watering of eyes in the presence of sun light, were also noticed in arsenicosis patients.
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