Environmental contamination by fluoroquinolones

Authors

  • Verônica Maria Fadário Frade University of São Paulo; School of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Technology
  • Meriellen Dias University of São Paulo; School of Engineering; Department of Chemical Engineering
  • Antonio Carlos Silva Costa Teixeira University of São Paulo; School of Engineering; Department of Chemical Engineering
  • Mauri Sergio Alves Palma University of São Paulo; School of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502011000100004

Abstract

Over the past few decades, a high number of pharmaceuticals have been detected in surface, ground and drinking waters. This contamination comes from domestic sewage, livestock, hospitals and chemical-pharmaceutical industries. Typical examples of these pollutants are the fluoroquinolones - powerful antibiotics used in human and veterinary medicine. The presence of fluoroquinolones in the environment can pose a serious threat to the ecosystem and to human health due to their high consumption globally: in 1998, around 120 tons were produced. Even at low environmental concentrations, antibiotics stimulate bacterial resistance. The consequences of the presence of fluoroquinolones in the environment are not fully understood, but are known to be toxic to plants and aquatic organisms. Approximately 85% of the fluoroquinolones present in influents can be removed by conventional wastewater treatment plants, but the removed fraction is frequently accumulated in the sludge, which is sometimes used as fertilizer, representing an additional input route into the environment. The removal of fluoroquinolones by biological treatment is ineffective, and it is believed that only advanced oxidation technologies are able to destroy these emerging pollutants.

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Published

2014-03-01

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How to Cite

Environmental contamination by fluoroquinolones . (2014). Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 50(1), 41-54. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502011000100004