International journal of hygiene and environmental health
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Int J Hyg Environ Health · May 2007
Quantification of urinary chorionic gonadotropin in spontaneous abortion of pre-clinically recognized pregnancy: method development and analytical validation.
Determination of environmental impacts on reproductive health and specifically on the incidence of early spontaneous abortion requires accurate estimates of the latter. This negative reproductive outcome can be detected by the pattern of elevation and decline of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) levels near and shortly beyond the expected time of implantation, requiring daily biomonitoring of hCG levels during the relevant period of the menstrual cycle. Prospective pregnancy studies to assess effects of potentially toxic exposures on human reproductive outcomes can involve up to three menstrual cycles and a huge number of samples in each, for the quantification of the inherently very low hCG levels usually can be determined only in serum. ⋯ This means that the immunoassay from DPC can identify, with relatively high confidence, non-pregnant women and the typical "rise and fall" pattern of early pregnancy loss through analysis of urine samples. Results also lead to the conclusion that there is a very good agreement between expected and observed urinary hCG levels indicative of good immunoassay accuracy for the studied range of hCG concentrations. In terms of analyte stability, it can be concluded that urinary hCG is stable under the expected conditions required for ongoing investigations that include temperatures of 2-8 degrees C for up to 48 h and temperatures of around -20 degrees C for longer periods that can extend to over 3 months.
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Int J Hyg Environ Health · May 2007
The 2005 World Health Organization re-evaluation of TEFs for dioxins and dioxin-like compounds--what are the consequences for German human background levels?
In 2005 the World Health Organization (WHO) re-evaluated toxicity equivalency factors (TEFs) for dioxins and dioxin-like compounds. WHO 2005 toxicity equivalent (TEq) levels were calculated based on our data on German background levels of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDD), dibenzofurans (PCDF) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) in human blood and milk of the Duisburg birth cohort study. ⋯ The shares of PCB (31% blood, 43% milk), especially of mono-ortho-substituted PCB (4% blood and milk), on total WHO 2005 TEq has become lower. If similar congener patterns can be assumed for certain matrices, appropriate multiplication factors can be used to convert TEq values of other TEF models sufficiently to WHO 2005 TEq values.
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Int J Hyg Environ Health · Mar 2007
Multicenter StudyOccupational exposure to nitrous oxide - the role of scavenging and ventilation systems in reducing the exposure level in operating rooms.
The aim of this study was to assess the level of occupational exposure to nitrous oxide (N(2)O) in operating rooms (ORs), as related to different ventilation and scavenging systems used to remove waste anaesthetic gases from the work environment. ⋯ Air conditioning and an efficient pressure/exhaust ventilation (above 12 air exchanges/h) together with efficient active scavenging systems are sufficient to sustain N(2)O exposure in ORs at levels below or within the OEL value of 180mg/m(3).
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Int J Hyg Environ Health · Mar 2007
Pesticide poisoning of farm workers-implications of blood test results from Vietnam.
Information on the health impacts of pesticides is quite limited in many developing countries, with many surveys relying solely on farmer self-assessments of their health status. To test the reliability of self-reported data, an acetyl cholinesterase enzyme (AChE) blood test was conducted for 190 rice farmers in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam. Results reveal a high prevalence of pesticide poisoning by organophosphate and carbamate exposure, where over 35% of test subjects experienced acute pesticide poisoning (a reduction of AChE >25%), and 21% chronically poisoned (>66% AChE reduction). ⋯ The results indicate that although the absolute amount of pesticides used does not increase the probability of poisoning, a 1% increase in the use of highly hazardous pesticides (WHO Ia or Ib) increases the probability of poisoning by 3.9% and an increased use of protective measures decreases the probability of poisoning by 44.3%. We also find significant provincial differences in poisoning incidence after we control for individual factors. The provincial effects highlight the potential importance of negative externalities, and suggest that future research on pesticide-related damage should include information on local water, air and soil contamination.
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Int J Hyg Environ Health · Nov 2006
Efficiency in endotoxin removal by a reprocessing protocol for electrophysiology catheters based on hydrogen peroxide plasma sterilization.
Electrophysiology and ablation cardiac catheters, which come in contact with blood during clinical use, are required to be non-pyrogenic (<20 endotoxin units (EU)/device). This study aimed to quantify the residual endotoxin load in reprocessed devices as a mandatory step to guarantee safe reuse. We monitored the pyrogenic status of the device (n=61) in three fundamental steps of the reprocessing protocol: after clinical use, after decontamination-cleaning treatments and after complete reprocessing, including sterilization by hydrogen peroxide gas plasma. ⋯ Depyrogenation testing demonstrated efficiency in endotoxin reduction of more than 62 times (1.8log). These results show the determining role of hydrogen peroxide gas-plasma sterilization in the reduction of pyrogenic load on medical devices. Considering actual hygienic requirements at single-use device reprocessing, hydrogen peroxide gas-plasma sterilization can be considered as an efficient treatment at non-lumen cardiac electrophysiology catheter reprocessing.