Infant clothing represents a critical yet overlooked exposure pathway for heavy metals, with significant implications for child health and sustainable consumption. This study investigates cadmium (Cd) and chromium (Cr) contamination in 33 textile samples, integrating in vitro bioaccessibility assays, cytotoxicity analysis, and risk assessment models to evaluate dermal exposure risks. Results reveal that 80% of samples exceeded OEKO-TEX Class I limits for As (mean 1.01 mg/kg), Cd (max 0.25 mg/kg), and Cr (max 4.32 mg/kg), with infant clothing showing unacceptable hazard indices (HI = 1.13) due to Cd (HQ = 1.12). Artificial sweat extraction demonstrated high bioaccessibility for Cr (37.8%) and Ni (28.5%), while keratinocyte exposure triggered oxidative stress (131% ROS increase) and dose-dependent cytotoxicity (22-59% viability reduction). Dark-colored synthetic fabrics exhibited elevated metal loads, linking industrial dye practices to health hazards. These findings underscore systemic gaps in textile safety regulations, particularly for low- and middle-income countries reliant on cost-effective apparel. We propose three policy levers: (1) tightening infant textile standards for Cd/Cr, (2) incentivizing non-toxic dye technologies, and (3) harmonizing global labeling requirements. By bridging toxicological evidence with circular economy principles, this work advances strategies to mitigate heavy metal exposure while supporting Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 3 (health), 12 (responsible consumption), and 12.4 (chemical safety).
Xiong et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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