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1.
Wien Med Wochenschr ; 174(13-14): 279-287, 2024 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38386215

RESUMO

The present study aimed to introduce Avicenna's views on pest control and the medicinal plants he proposed as natural pesticides. Also, we addressed the strategies that he leveraged to formulate and prescribe them, and, finally, we put his views into perspective with modern science. The data were collected using Al-Qanun Fi Al-Tibb (The Canon of Medicine) as well as scientific databases. According to Al-Qanun Fi Al-Tibb, 42 medicinal plants are described as natural pest control agents. After introducing the pest control properties of each plant, Avicenna explained the appropriate strategies for use of these plants. These strategies or formulations included incensing, spraying, spreading, rubbing, smudging, and scent-dispersing, which are equivalent to the modern pesticide formulations of fumigants, aerosols, pastes and poisoned baits, lotions, creams, and slow-release formulations, respectively. This study revealed that Avicenna introduced the pest control approach with natural plants in his book Al-Qanun Fi Al-Tibb and, thus, harnessed the power of nature to control nature. Future research is recommended to find the pest control merits of the presented medicinal plants, in order to incorporate them into pest control programs and reduce environmental pollution resulting from the complications of current synthetic pesticides.


Assuntos
Praguicidas , Plantas Medicinais , Praguicidas/história , Humanos , Controle de Pragas/história , Obras Médicas de Referência , História Medieval , Medicina Arábica/história , Fitoterapia/história
2.
Photosynth Res ; 145(2): 71-82, 2020 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32458186

RESUMO

Constantin A. (Tino) Rebeiz, a pioneer in the field of chlorophyll biosynthesis, and a longtime member of the University of Illinois community of plant biologists, passed away on July 25, 2019. He came to the USA at a time that was difficult for members of minority groups to be in academia. However, his passion for the complexity of the biochemical origin of chlorophylls drove a career in basic sciences which extended into applied areas of environmentally friendly pesticides and treatment for skin cancer. He was a philanthropist; in retirement, he founded the Rebeiz Foundation for Basic Research which recognized excellence and lifetime achievements of selected top scientists in the general area of photosynthesis research. His life history, scientific breakthroughs, and community service hold important lessons for the field.


Assuntos
Ácido Aminolevulínico/história , Clorofila/história , Praguicidas/história , Neoplasias Cutâneas/história , Logro , História do Século XX , Humanos , Fotossíntese , Neoplasias Cutâneas/terapia
3.
Soc Sci Med ; 239: 112529, 2019 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31561208

RESUMO

Pesticide-related health impacts in Ecuador's banana industry illustrate the need to understand science's social production in the context of major North-South inequities. This paper explores colonialism's ongoing context-specific relationships to science, and what these imply for population health inquiry and praxis. Themes in postcolonial science and technology studies and critical Latin American scholarship guide this exploration, oriented around an ethnographic case study of bananas, pesticides and health in Ecuador. The challenge of explaining these impacts prompts us to explore discursive and contextual dynamics of pesticide toxicology and phytopathology, two disciplines integral to understanding pesticide-health linkages. The evolution of banana phytopathology reflects patterns of banana production and plant science in settings made accessible to scientists by European colonialism and American military interventions. Similarly, American foreign policy in Cold War-era Latin America created conditions for widespread pesticide exposures and accompanying health science research. Neocolonial representations of the global South interacted with these material realities in fostering generation of scientific knowledge. Implications for health praxis include troubling celebratory portrayals of global interconnectedness in the field of global health, motivating critical political economy and radical community-based approaches in their place. Another implication is a challenge to conciliatory corporate engagement approaches in health research, given banana production's symbiosis of scientifically 'productive' military and corporate initiatives. Similarly, the origins and evolution of toxicology should promote humility and precautionary approaches in addressing environmental injustices such as pesticide toxicity, given the role of corporate actors in promoting systematic underestimation of risk to vulnerable populations. Perhaps most unsettlingly, the very structures and processes that drive health inequities in Ecuador's banana industry simultaneously shape production of knowledge about those inequities. Public health scholars should thus move beyond simply carrying out more, or better, studies, and pursue the structural changes needed to redress historical and ongoing injustices.


Assuntos
Agricultura/história , Colonialismo/história , Disparidades nos Níveis de Saúde , Musa , Praguicidas/história , Agricultura/estatística & dados numéricos , Antropologia Cultural , Países em Desenvolvimento , Equador/epidemiologia , Meio Ambiente , Saúde Global , História do Século XX , Humanos , Praguicidas/efeitos adversos , Saúde Pública , Sociologia Médica
5.
Toxicol Sci ; 162(1): 24-35, 2018 03 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29228398

RESUMO

One of the major classes of pesticides is that of the organophosphates (OPs). Initial developments date back almost 2 centuries but it was only in the mid-1940s that OPs reached a prominent status as insecticides, a status that, albeit declining, is still ongoing. OPs are highly toxic to nontarget species including humans, the primary effects being an acute cholinergic toxicity (responsible for thousands of poisoning each year) and a delayed polyneuropathy. Several issues of current debate and investigation on the toxicology of OPs are discussed in this brief review. These include (1) possible additional targets of OPs, (2) OPs as developmental neurotoxicants, (3) OPs and neurodegenerative diseases, (4) OPs and the "aerotoxic syndrome," (5) OPs and the microbiome, and (6) OPs and cancer. Some of these issues have been debated and studied for some time, while others are newer, suggesting that the study of the toxicology of OPs will remain an important scientific and public health issue for years to come.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Biomédica/história , Poluentes Ambientais/toxicidade , Compostos Organofosforados/toxicidade , Praguicidas/toxicidade , Toxicologia/história , Animais , Pesquisa Biomédica/educação , Poluentes Ambientais/história , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Compostos Organofosforados/história , Praguicidas/história , Toxicologia/educação , Estados Unidos
6.
Ann Agric Environ Med ; 24(2): 312-316, 2017 Jun 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28664715

RESUMO

Arsenicals in agriculture. Beginning in the 1970s, the use of arsenic compounds for such purposes as wood preservatives, began to grow. By 1980, in the USA, 70% of arsenic had been consumed for the production of wood preservatives. This practice was later stopped, due to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ban of the arsenic-and chromium-based wood preservative chromated copper arsenate. In the past, arsenical herbicides containing cacodylic acid as an active ingredient have been used extensively in the USA, from golf courses to cotton fields, and drying-out the plants before harvesting. The original commercial form of Agent Blue was among 10 toxic insecticides, fungicides and herbicides partially deregulated by the US EPA in February 2004, and specific limits on toxic residues in meat, milk, poultry and eggs, were removed. Today, however, they are no longer used as weed-killers, with one exception - monosodium methanearsonate (MSMA), a broadleaf weed herbicide for use on cotton. Severe poisonings from cacodylic acid caused headache, dizziness, vomiting, profuse and watery diarrhea, followed by dehydration, gradual fall in blood pressure, stupor, convulsions, general paralysis and possible risk of death within 3-14 days.The relatively frequent use of arsenic and its compounds in both industry and agriculture points to a wide spectrum of opportunities for human exposure. This exposure can be via inhalation of airborne arsenic, contaminated drinking water, beverages, or from food and drugs. Today, acute organic arsenical poisonings are mostly accidental. Considerable concern has developed surrounding its delayed effects, for its genotoxic and carcinogenic potential, which has been demonstrated in epidemiological studies and subsequent animal experiments. Conclusions. There is substantial epidemiological evidence for an excessive risk, mostly for skin and lung cancer, among humans exposed to organic arsenicals in occupational and environmental settings. Furthermore, the genotoxic and carcinogenic effects have only been observed at relatively high exposure rates. Current epidemiological and experimental studies are attempting to elucidate the mechanism of this action, pointing to the question whether arsenic is actually a true genotoxic, or rather an epigenetic carcinogen. Due to the complexity of its effects, both options remain plausible. Its interactions with other toxic substances still represent another important field of interest.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Trabalhadores Agrícolas/história , Intoxicação por Arsênico/história , Exposição Ambiental/história , Praguicidas/toxicidade , Doenças dos Trabalhadores Agrícolas/epidemiologia , Doenças dos Trabalhadores Agrícolas/etiologia , Intoxicação por Arsênico/epidemiologia , Intoxicação por Arsênico/etiologia , Exposição Ambiental/análise , Exposição Ambiental/estatística & dados numéricos , Contaminação de Alimentos/análise , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Praguicidas/história , Risco
8.
Environ Int ; 74: 82-8, 2015 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25454223

RESUMO

Quantifying the competing rates of intake and elimination of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in the human body is necessary to understand the levels and trends of POPs at a population level. In this paper we reconstruct the historical intake and elimination of ten polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and five organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) from Australian biomonitoring data by fitting a population-level pharmacokinetic (PK) model. Our analysis exploits two sets of cross-sectional biomonitoring data for PCBs and OCPs in pooled blood serum samples from the Australian population that were collected in 2003 and 2009. The modeled adult reference intakes in 1975 for PCB congeners ranged from 0.89 to 24.5ng/kgbw/day, lower than the daily intakes of OCPs ranging from 73 to 970ng/kgbw/day. Modeled intake rates are declining with half-times from 1.1 to 1.3years for PCB congeners and 0.83 to 0.97years for OCPs. The shortest modeled intrinsic human elimination half-life among the compounds studied here is 6.4years for hexachlorobenzene, and the longest is 30years for PCB-74. Our results indicate that it is feasible to reconstruct intakes and to estimate intrinsic human elimination half-lives using the population-level PK model and biomonitoring data only. Our modeled intrinsic human elimination half-lives are in good agreement with values from a similar study carried out for the population of the United Kingdom, and are generally longer than reported values from other industrialized countries in the Northern Hemisphere.


Assuntos
Poluentes Ambientais/análise , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/análise , Praguicidas/análise , Bifenilos Policlorados/análise , Adolescente , Adulto , Austrália , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Estudos Transversais , Monitoramento Ambiental , Poluentes Ambientais/história , Poluentes Ambientais/farmacocinética , Feminino , Meia-Vida , Hexaclorobenzeno/análise , Hexaclorobenzeno/farmacocinética , História do Século XX , Humanos , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/história , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/farmacocinética , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Modelos Teóricos , Praguicidas/história , Praguicidas/farmacocinética , Bifenilos Policlorados/história , Bifenilos Policlorados/farmacocinética , Adulto Jovem
9.
Int J Occup Environ Health ; 19(1): 11-21, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23582610

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Between 1992 and 2010 in the Costa Rican Caribbean, a social movement coalition called Foro Emaús sought to change people's view on problems of high pesticide use in banana production. OBJECTIVE: To understand the formation and membership of Foro Emaús, its success period, and its decline. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews of 28 key actors; a questionnaire survey among school personnel (n = 475) in Siquirres, Matina, and Talamanca counties; and secondary data from newspapers, leaflets, and movement documents were used. RESULTS: Foro Emaús developed activism around pesticide issues and put pressure on governmental agencies and banana companies and shaped people's perception of pesticide risks. The success of the Foro Emaús movement led to the reinforcement of a counteracting social movement (Solidarismo) by conservative sectors of the Catholic Church and the banana companies. We found that the participation of unions in Foro Emaús is an early example of social movement unionism. CONCLUSIONS: Scientific pesticide risk analysis is not the only force that shapes emerging societal perceptions of pesticide risk. Social movements influence the priority given to particular risks and can be crucial in putting health and environmental risk issues on the political and research agenda.


Assuntos
Catolicismo/história , Sindicatos/história , Musa , Praguicidas/história , Mudança Social/história , Agricultura , Costa Rica , Exposição Ambiental , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Sindicatos/organização & administração , Motivação , Exposição Ocupacional/estatística & dados numéricos , Percepção , Medição de Risco
10.
Mar Pollut Bull ; 54(9): 1434-40, 2007 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17628612

RESUMO

Three sediment cores were collected from the top to the mouth of Quanzhou Bay, Southeast China, in order to establish sources and historical trends of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in the region. The spatial distribution of OCPs in surface sediments implies that Quanzhou Bay received the contamination inputs not only from rivers near the shore, but also from outside the bay. The variation profiles of concentrations clearly showed that OCPs were widely used between 1960s and 1980s in China. A recent increasing trend was found in all cores despite their ban in China in 1983. Different ratios of (DDD+DDE)/DDTs indicated that DDTs at the top of the bay were mainly derived from long-term weather soils, while DDTs near the mouth of the bay were mainly derived from fresh inputs from outside the bay. Higher percentage of gamma-HCH in HCHs deposited after 1990 implies that lindane may have been used recently around Quanzhou Bay.


Assuntos
Sedimentos Geológicos/análise , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/análise , Praguicidas/análise , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , China , Monitoramento Ambiental , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/história , Praguicidas/história , Poluentes Químicos da Água/história
11.
Osiris ; 19: 203-19, 2004.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15478280

RESUMO

In the postwar period, modernist frameworks of the human body, which described the body as both cosmopolitan and separated from its environment, competed with ecological frameworks that constructed the body as inherently porous and tightly linked to the surrounding world. The history of pesticide-related illness among farmworkers, and the gradual recognition that pesticides posed a new kind of public health problem, illustrates how these competing understandings were adopted, mobilized, and applied by different groups, as well as how politics shaped the emergence of new medical facts. New forms of illness generated new knowledge about the modern landscape and made visible material links between bodies and their environments.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Trabalhadores Agrícolas/história , Corpo Humano , Doenças Profissionais/história , Praguicidas/história , Saúde Pública/história , População Rural/história , História do Século XX , Humanos , Estados Unidos
12.
Pediatrics ; 113(4 Suppl): 945-51, 2004 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15060186

RESUMO

Review of the literature reveals that environmental hazards cause adverse health effects that include sterility, infertility, embryotoxicity, low birth weight, skin lesions, neurodevelopmental defects, immunologic disorders, cancer, and fear of late effects. They have been identified mostly by astute practitioners but also by a bacteriologist, an animal experimentalist, 5 factory workers in childless marriages, and a tipsy bystander in an economically impoverished area of Baltimore. Dust on a parent's work clothes has transported a hazard at work to a hazard at home (lead, asbestos, and chlordecone). Causality is established by showing a dose-response effect and reproducing the effect in studies of other exposed groups or by using another epidemiologic method, eg, prospective instead of retrospective study. Also, the findings should be biologically plausible and not attributable to a concomitant variable such as cigarette smoking. Contrary to front-page newspaper headlines, incidence rates for childhood leukemia are not rising. Preserving specimens for future studies has been valuable: blood from people who were exposed to dioxin in Seveso, Italy; mummified umbilical cords containing methyl mercury at Minamata Bay, Japan; and Guthrie dried blood spots to screen retrospectively for 43 genetic disorders and a specific prenatal cytogenetic abnormality in some children with 1 form of leukemia. Recommendations are given for enhancing interest in environmental hazards and their discovery by clinicians.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Biomédica/história , Substâncias Perigosas/história , Carcinógenos/efeitos adversos , Carcinógenos/história , Causalidade , Criança , Epidemiologia/história , Medicina Baseada em Evidências/história , História do Século XX , Humanos , Neoplasias/induzido quimicamente , Neurotoxinas/efeitos adversos , Neurotoxinas/história , Pediatria/história , Praguicidas/história , Praguicidas/toxicidade , Teratogênicos/história , Teratogênicos/toxicidade
13.
J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol ; 12(1): 64-80, 2002.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11859434

RESUMO

Investigation of pesticide impacts on human health depends on good measures of exposure. Historical exposure data are needed to study health outcomes, such as cancer, that involve long latency periods, and other outcomes that are a function of the timing of exposure. Environmental or biological samples collected at the time of epidemiologic study may not represent historical exposure levels. To study the relationship between residential exposure to pesticides and breast cancer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, historical records of pesticide use were integrated into a geographic information system (GIS) to estimate exposures from large-scale pesticide applications between 1948 and 1995. Information on pesticide use for gypsy moth and other tree/vegetative pest control, cranberry bog cultivation, other agriculture, mosquito control, recreational turf management, and rights-of-way maintenance is included in the database. Residents living within or near pesticide use areas may be exposed through inhalation due to drift and volatilization and through dermal contact and ingestion at the time of application or in later years from pesticides that deposit on soil, accumulate in crops, or migrate to groundwater. Procedures were developed to use the GIS to estimate the relative intensity of past exposures at each study subject's Cape Cod addresses over the past 40 years, taking into account local meteorological data, distance and direction from a residence to a pesticide use source area, size of the source area, application by ground-based or aerial methods, and persistent or nonpersistent character of the pesticide applied. The resulting individual-level estimates of relative exposure intensity can be used in conjunction with interview data to obtain more complete exposure assessment in an epidemiologic study. While the database can improve environmental epidemiological studies involving pesticides, it simultaneously illustrates important data gaps that cannot be filled. Studies such as this one have the potential to identify preventable causes of disease and guide public policies.


Assuntos
Exposição Ambiental/história , Monitoramento Ambiental/história , Praguicidas/história , Agroquímicos/análise , Documentação , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Monitoramento Epidemiológico , Geografia , História do Século XX , Habitação , Humanos , Sistemas de Informação/instrumentação , Massachusetts/epidemiologia , Modelos Químicos , Praguicidas/análise , Estatística como Assunto/métodos
14.
Estud. av ; Estud. av;15(43): 61-74, set.-dez. 2001. ilus
Artigo em Português | LILACS | ID: lil-397084
15.
Neurotoxicology ; 21(1-2): 211-8, 2000.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10794402

RESUMO

The introduction of chemical pesticides following WW II ushered in the era of the "quick fix" for any aqricultural, forestry and human health problems. Scenarios of use, misuse, abuse and environmental contamination can be presented for any class of pesticide, culminating in dependence on these chemicals for increased production of food and fibre and improved health. With time, sophisticated agents having unique, target-specific mechanisms of action evolved but at increased cost(s) to crop production. Equatorial countries, rapidly becoming "breadbaskets" of the world, are particularly dependent on pesticides as they strive to increase production of nontraditional export products (NTEPS), valuable cash crops in demand in countries having more temperate climates. Developing nations have neither the legislation and regulations necessary to control pesticides nor trained personnel to inspect and monitor use, to analyze residues in produce or to initiate training programs. Their transition from agrarian to industrialized societies has meant that smaller, less well educated populations must shoulder the responsibility of increased traditional food production for consumption by urban populations as well as that of NTEPS. Unfortunately, to attain these goals, many older, more toxic, environmentally persistent and cheap pesticides, long banned in developed countries, are used extensively, creating serious local and global contamination and health problems.


Assuntos
Controle de Insetos/história , Praguicidas/história , Animais , História do Século XX , Humanos
16.
Environ Health Perspect ; 107 Suppl 3: 431-7, 1999 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10346991

RESUMO

Six million children live in poverty in America's inner cities. These children are at high risk of exposure to pesticides that are used extensively in urban schools, homes, and day-care centers for control of roaches, rats, and other vermin. The organophosphate insecticide chlorpyrifos and certain pyrethroids are the registered pesticides most heavily applied in cities. Illegal street pesticides are also in use, including tres pasitos (a carbamate), tiza china, and methyl parathion. In New York State in 1997, the heaviest use of pesticides in all counties statewide was in the urban boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn. Children are highly vulnerable to pesticides. Because of their play close to the ground, their hand-to-mouth behavior, and their unique dietary patterns, children absorb more pesticides from their environment than adults. The long persistence of semivolatile pesticides such as chlorpyrifos on rugs, furniture, stuffed toys, and other absorbent surfaces within closed apartments further enhances urban children's exposures. Compounding these risks of heavy exposures are children's decreased ability to detoxify and excrete pesticides and the rapid growth, development, and differentiation of their vital organ systems. These developmental immaturities create early windows of great vulnerability. Recent experimental data suggest, for example, that chlorpyrifos may be a developmental neurotoxicant and that exposure in utero may cause biochemical and functional aberrations in fetal neurons as well as deficits in the number of neurons. Certain pyrethroids exert hormonal activity that may alter early neurologic and reproductive development. Assays currently used for assessment of the toxicity of pesticides are insensitive and cannot accurately predict effects to children exposed in utero or in early postnatal life. Protection of American children, and particularly of inner-city children, against the developmental hazards of pesticides requires a comprehensive strategy that monitors patterns of pesticide use on a continuing basis, assesses children's actual exposures to pesticides, uses state-of-the-art developmental toxicity testing, and establishes societal targets for reduction of pesticide use.


Assuntos
Praguicidas/efeitos adversos , Adulto , Animais , Criança , Avaliação Pré-Clínica de Medicamentos , Glândulas Endócrinas/efeitos dos fármacos , Exposição Ambiental/prevenção & controle , Feminino , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Lactente , Sistema Nervoso/efeitos dos fármacos , Sistema Nervoso/embriologia , Praguicidas/história , Pobreza , Gravidez , Ratos , Fatores de Risco , Estados Unidos , United States Environmental Protection Agency , Saúde da População Urbana
17.
Public Underst Sci ; 5(1): 1-20, 1996 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11609044

RESUMO

During 1989, a major environmental and health risk issue, the spraying of Alar on apples, created a furor among the American people. After hearing charges from the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) that eating Alar-laden apples significantly increased a child's risk of developing cancer, numbers of school districts dropped apples from their menus and parents poured apple juice down the drains. Apple sales plummeted. The NRDC's charges, which were disseminated by a well-planned and effective public relations campaign, brought counter-charges from the US environmental Protection Agency, which accused the NRDC of basing its study on poor data, among other things. The core of the dispute was in the risk figures and risk interpretations being used by each organization.


Assuntos
Frutas/história , Jornais como Assunto/história , Praguicidas/história , Saúde Pública/história , História do Século XX , Estados Unidos
18.
Acta Med Austriaca ; 12(1): 19-24, 1985.
Artigo em Alemão | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3893012
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