Nitrogen compounds in drinking water

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Nitrates[edit | edit source]

  • Standard 50 mg/l;
  • an increased concentration of nitrates in drinking water is dangerous for infants → occurrence of methemoglobinemia .

Methemoglobinemia edit source[edit | edit source]

Nitrates are reduced by bacteria in the GIT to nitrites → absorbed into the blood → change hemoglobin (Fe 2+ ) to methemoglobin (Fe 3+ ), which tightly binds oxygen → tissue hypoxia .

Clinical picture of methemoglobinemia[edit | edit source]

In the first stage, the lips and skin turn blue. The condition progresses to shortness of breath, hypoxia damages internal organs, and if this condition persists for a long time, death may occur.

Pathophysiology of methemoglobinemia[edit | edit source]

  • Infants (up to the third month) do not have a sufficiently mature methemoglobin reductase system;
  • at the same time, they still partially have fetal hemoglobin, which is more prone to the oxidation of Fe 2+ to Fe 3+ .

Nitrites[edit | edit source]

  • Standard 0.1–0.5 mg/l;
  • presence in water indicates pollution;
  • the nitrate/nitrite ratio is important.

Nitrites and health[edit | edit source]

In the body, nitrites turn into some carcinogenic nitrosamines, which can cause stomach or bladder cancer. The protective factor is vitamin C, which serves as an antioxidant.

Links[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  • KRATZER, Karel, František KOŽÍŠEK a Vladimíra PUKLOVÁ. Jakost pitné vody z veřejných vodovodů [online]. Poslední revize 23.9.2009, [cit. 2010-11-04]. <http://www.szu.cz/tema/zivotni-prostredi/jakost-pitne-vody-z-verejnych-vodovodu>.