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      Supplementary dataset for child and adult exposure and health risk evaluation following the use of metal- and metalloid-containing costume cosmetics sold in the United States

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          Abstract

          The data presented in this article are related to the research article entitled "Child and adult exposure and health risk evaluation following the use of metal- and metalloid-containing costume cosmetics sold in the United States" [1]. This article describes the concentration of metals and metalloids contained in various cosmetic products such as body paint, lipstick and eye shadow, the relative percent deviation of two analyses performed on the products and the physico-chemico properties of the metals and metalloids used in the SkinPerm model presented in the aforementioned article.

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          Child and adult exposure and health risk evaluation following the use of metal- and metalloid-containing costume cosmetics sold in the United States.

          Costume cosmetics (lipstick, body paints, eyeshadow) were analyzed for metals using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Sb was detected in all samples (range: 0.12-6.3 mg/kg; d.f. 100%), followed by Pb (<0.15-9.3 mg/kg), Ni (<0.20-6.3 mg/kg), Co (<0.5-2.0 mg/kg); with d.f. 80% each, Hg (<0.00015-0.0020 mg/kg; d.f. 50%) and As (0.53 mg/kg, d.f. 10%). Ingestion and dermal exposures were estimated for child- and adult-intermittent and adult-occupational users. Adult-occupational users exceeded the U.S. EPA Reference Dose (RfD) for Sb and the CA Proposition 65 maximum allowable dose level (MADL) for Pb was exceeded for all user scenarios. The Pb dose from body paint was sufficient to raise blood lead levels (BLL) in all user scenarios above baseline BLLs from 0.2 μg/dL to 1.9 μg/dL per the Adult Lead Model (ALM) and child Integrated Exposure Uptake Biokinetic (IEUBK) blood Pb models. Change in BLL was less than 1 μg/dL amongst the child and adult-intermittent users, the benchmark change in BLL developed for health risk assessments for children. Adult-occupational users exceeded the CA Proposition 65 NSRL intake value of 15 μg/day, which corresponds to an increase of 1.2 μg/dL above baseline levels using ALM. Exposure of occupational users of costume cosmetics should be evaluated further to prevent unnecessary metal exposure.
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            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Journal
            Data Brief
            Data Brief
            Data in Brief
            Elsevier
            2352-3409
            04 May 2017
            August 2017
            04 May 2017
            : 13
            : 129-131
            Affiliations
            [a ]Cardno ChemRisk, LLC, 101 2nd Street, Suite 700, San Francisco, CA 94105, United States
            [b ]Dept. of Environmental Health Sciences, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1415 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029, United States
            [c ]Brooks Applied Labs, 3958 6th Ave NW, Seattle, WA 98107, United States
            Author notes
            [* ]Corresponding author. Angela.Perez@ 123456cardno.com
            Article
            S2352-3409(17)30165-8
            10.1016/j.dib.2017.04.033
            5451178
            fb50aeca-2b4d-4e25-b6ea-74bb4daa336a
            © 2017 The Authors

            This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

            History
            : 9 December 2016
            : 10 April 2017
            : 21 April 2017
            Categories
            Data Article

            cosmetics,makeup,halloween,metal,metalloid,lead,arsenic,face paint,body paint

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