• Title of article

    Bisphenol A Detection in Various Brands of Drinking Bottled Water in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Using Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometer

  • Author/Authors

    Elobeid, Mai A. King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , Almarhoon, Zainab M. King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Chemistry, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , Virk, Promy King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , Hassan, Zeinab K. King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , Omer, Sawsan A. King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , ElAmin, Maha King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , Daghestani, Maha H. King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia , AlOlayan, Ebtisam M. King Saud University - Faculty of Science - Department of Zoology, Women’s Students-Medical Studies Sciences Section, Saudi Arabia

  • From page
    455
  • To page
    459
  • Abstract
    Purpose: To assess whether bisphenol A contamination occurred in seven brands of bottled drinking water in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Methods: Liquid-liquid extraction (using dichloromethane) was used to analytically extract bisphenol A from drinking water bottles and a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer was employed for its detection using a splitless capillary column and helium as the carrier gas. Results: The concentration of bisphenol A (BPA) was high in all the bottled water brands tested. The mean concentration of BPA of the bottled water stored indoors (4.03 ng/L) was significantly lower than that stored outdoors (7.5 ng/L). Conclusion: Our results show that significant amounts of BPA leached from bottle containers into the water. Long storage of bottled water under direct sunlight should be avoided to reduce the risk of human exposure to BPA.
  • Keywords
    Bisphenol A , Bottled water , Public health , Endocrine disruptors , Saudi Arabia
  • Journal title
    Tropical Journal of Pharmaceutical Research
  • Journal title
    Tropical Journal of Pharmaceutical Research
  • Record number

    2536152