| P-DICHLOROBENZENE
FACT SHEET Brief Overview: Contaminant:
p-Dichlorobenzene Category: Organic MCL:
75 PPB Source: Manufacturing,
insecticide and fungicide, deodorant Effect:
Nausea, headaches, anemia, liver blood damage Followup:
Treat and restest quarterly Treatment:Granular
activated charcoal Details:
Source: Para-dichlorobenzene (p-DCB) is an organic
solid of white crystals with a mothball-like odor. It is used mainly as an insecticidal
fumigant against clothes moths and as a deodorant for garbage and restrooms. It
is also used as an insecticide and fungicide on crops, and in the manufacture
of other organic chemicals and in plastics, dyes, pharmaceuticals. 74 million
lbs. of p-DCB were consumed by industry in 1986, and demand was predicted to increase.
Chemical waste dump leachates and direct manufacturing effluents are reported
to be the major source of p-DCB pollution in Lake Ontario. From 1987 to 1993,
according to the Toxic Release Inventory, p-DCB releases to water totalled almost
34,000 lbs. Releases to land totalled nearly 4,500 lbs. These releases were primarily
from a single chemical manufacturing plant in West Virginia. What happens
to p-DCB when it is released to the environment? p-DCB only moderately binds to
soil so it may leach to ground water. Otherwise, it will evaporate and be slowly
broken down by microbes. If released to water, it will largely evaporate. p-DCB
is not likely to accumulate in most aquatic life, though it may in some fishes.
Effect: Short-term: EPA has found p-DCB to
potentially cause the following health effects when people are exposed to it at
levels above the MCL for relatively short periods of time: nausea, vomiting, headaches,
and irritation of the eyes and respiratory tract. Long-term: p-DCB has the
potential to cause the following effects from a lifetime exposure at levels above
the MCL: anemia, skin lesions, appetite loss, damage to liver and changes in blood.
Followup: Treat and restest
quarterly. Treatment: Granular activated
charcoal in combination with Packed Tower Aeration. |