J Toxicol Env Heal A
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J Toxicol Env Heal A · Apr 2007
Methods for bias reduction in time-series studies of particulate matter air pollution and mortality.
In many cities of the United States, measurements of ambient particulate matter air pollution (PM) are available only every sixth day. Time-series studies conducted in these cities that investigate the relationship between mortality and PM are restricted to using a single day's PM as the measure of PM exposure, rather than using measurements taken over several consecutive days. Studies showed that using a single-day PM as the measure of PM exposure can result in estimates that have a negative bias, sometimes in the order of over half of the value being estimated. ⋯ The corresponding effect estimates obtained using the single-day lag-1 PM concentration are 0.18% and 0.23%. The estimates obtained using the lag-1 PM concentration were the most widely reported results from the recent multicity National Morbidity, Mortality, and Air Pollution Study (NMMAPS) analyses. The more accurate estimates obtained from the methods introduced in this article will enable more accurate quantification of the increased incidence in mortality due to elevation in PM levels and the benefit of current or more stringent regulatory standards.
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J Toxicol Env Heal A · Apr 2007
Alteration of brain and interrenal StAR protein, P450scc, and Cyp11beta mRNA levels in atlantic salmon after nominal waterborne exposure to the synthetic pharmaceutical estrogen ethynylestradiol.
Pharmaceuticals are ubiquitous pollutants in the aquatic environment, where their potential effects on nontarget species like fish has only recently become subject of systematic investigations. Recently, it was shown that the documented xenoestrogen nonylphenol produced variations in brain steroidogenic acute regulatory (StAR) protein, cytochrome P-450-mediated cholesterol side-chain cleavage (P450scc), and cytochrome P-45011beta hydroxylase (CYP11beta) gene transcripts of exposed juvenile salmon (Arukwe, 2005). In the present study, experiments were undertaken to examine the effect of the synthetic pharmaceutical endocrine disruptor ethynylestradiol (EE2), given in water at 5 or 50 ng/L and sampled at d 0 (control), 3, and 7 after exposure, on these key and rate-limiting brain and interrenal steroidogenic pathways of juvenile salmon using quantitative (real-time) polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). ⋯ These changes in the levels of StAR, P450scc, and CYP11beta mRNA levels in important steroidogenic organs suggest that the experimental animals are experiencing a time-dependent impaired steroidogenesis. Thus, the StAR protein, P450scc, and CYP11beta might represent sensitive diagnostic tools for short-term and acute exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals. In view of the present study and high concentrations of EE2 reported in effluents and surface waters from Europe and the United States, pharmaceuticals in the environment represent potentially more serious health concern both to humans and wildlife than earlier anticipated.