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1.
Health Place ; 89: 103303, 2024 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38971046

ABSTRACT

Physical environment plays a key role in determining human health risks. Exposure to toxins, weather extremes, degraded air and water quality, high levels of noise and limited accessibility to green areas can negatively affect health. Furthermore, adverse environmental exposures are often correlated with each other and with socioeconomic status, thereby compounding disadvantages in marginalized populations. Moreover, despite their importance in determining human health risks, the role of multiple environmental exposures is not well studied, and only a few resources contain aggregate environmental exposure data and only for selected areas of the contiguous US. To fill these gaps, we took a cumulative approach to measuring the environment by generating a composite Multi-Exposure Environmental Index (MEEI) as a US Census Tract-level summary of key environmental factors with known health effects. This measure quantifies multiple environmental exposures in the same area that can result in additive and synergistic effects on health outcomes. This information is crucial to better understand and possibly leverage environmental determinants of health for informed policy-making and intervention.

2.
Environ Geochem Health ; 46(3): 82, 2024 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38367080

ABSTRACT

Characterizing the interplay between exposures shaping the human exposome is vital for uncovering the etiology of complex diseases. For example, cancer risk is modified by a range of multifactorial external environmental exposures. Environmental, socioeconomic, and lifestyle factors all shape lung cancer risk. However, epidemiological studies of radon aimed at identifying populations at high risk for lung cancer often fail to consider multiple exposures simultaneously. For example, moderating factors, such as PM2.5, may affect the transport of radon progeny to lung tissue. This ecological analysis leveraged a population-level dataset from the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End-Results data (2013-17) to simultaneously investigate the effect of multiple sources of low-dose radiation (gross [Formula: see text] activity and indoor radon) and PM2.5 on lung cancer incidence rates in the USA. County-level factors (environmental, sociodemographic, lifestyle) were controlled for, and Poisson regression and random forest models were used to assess the association between radon exposure and lung and bronchus cancer incidence rates. Tree-based machine learning (ML) method perform better than traditional regression: Poisson regression: 6.29/7.13 (mean absolute percentage error, MAPE), 12.70/12.77 (root mean square error, RMSE); Poisson random forest regression: 1.22/1.16 (MAPE), 8.01/8.15 (RMSE). The effect of PM2.5 increased with the concentration of environmental radon, thereby confirming findings from previous studies that investigated the possible synergistic effect of radon and PM2.5 on health outcomes. In summary, the results demonstrated (1) a need to consider multiple environmental exposures when assessing radon exposure's association with lung cancer risk, thereby highlighting (1) the importance of an exposomics framework and (2) that employing ML models may capture the complex interplay between environmental exposures and health, as in the case of indoor radon exposure and lung cancer incidence.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor , Lung Neoplasms , Radiation Exposure , Radon , Humans , Incidence , Lung Neoplasms/epidemiology , Lung Neoplasms/etiology , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Environmental Exposure/analysis , Radon/toxicity , Radon/analysis , Radiation Exposure/adverse effects , Radiation Exposure/analysis , Particulate Matter/toxicity , Particulate Matter/analysis , Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis
3.
Waste Manag ; 120: 364-372, 2021 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33340818

ABSTRACT

A range of energy fuels (ethanol, char, oil/wax and gas) was produced from fibre waste contaminated with plastic through the application of a fermentation-pyrolysis route. The fibre component was first converted to ethanol by simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF), achieving an ethanol concentration of 39.8 g/L. The residue, enriched in lignin and plastics, was subjected to fast pyrolysis at temperatures between 350 and 550 °C. A wax product with a higher heating value (HHV) higher than 28 MJ/kg was obtained for temperatures higher than 450 °C, while values lower than 15 MJ/kg were observed for the oils produced from the untreated waste stream. Pyrolysis at 550 °C produced a wax with an HHV as high as 32.1 MJ/kg, where 51.8% of the energy content of the fermentation residue was transferred. The attractive energy contents of the pyrolysis products were enabled by oxygen removal from the feedstock during fermentation to ethanol.


Subject(s)
Pyrolysis , Recycling , Carbohydrates , Fermentation , Plastics , Waste Products/analysis
4.
Skeletal Radiol ; 39(7): 669-73, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19911181

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine if new onset of low back pain in adults could be secondary to lumbar spondylolysis by establishing the age-related prevalence in the general population by examining patients undergoing computed tomography (CT) for reasons unrelated to back pain. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The records of 2,555 patients who had undergone abdominal and pelvic CT in 2008 were reviewed electronically. In order to determine a true representation of the general population, we reviewed all indications for CT, excluding patients with a primary complaint of low back pain as the primary indication for imaging. Equal numbers of patients were separated into age groups by decade to ensure an even distribution of ages for statistical analysis. Patients older than 70 years were grouped together to provide case numbers comparable to those of the other decades. Logistic regression analysis was performed to evaluate the significance of the results. Three board-certified radiologists, including two musculoskeletal fellows and a radiology resident, retrospectively evaluated CT scans for lumbar spondylolysis, including unilateral and bilateral defects. RESULTS: Of the 2,555 cases evaluated, there were 203 positive cases of defects of the lumbar pars interarticularis. This corresponded to an overall prevalence of 8.0%. Prevalence per decade was fairly evenly distributed and ranged from 7.0%( ages 30-39 years) to 9.2% (ages 70 years and above). Prevalence of ages 20-49 years was 7.9%, and that of ages 50 years and older was 8.0%. Male to female ratio was 1.5:1. Logistic regression showed no significant increase in spondylolysis based on age. CONCLUSION: No significant increase in the prevalence of lumbar spondylolysis was demonstrated in patients older than 20 years. This suggests that the development of symptomatic lumbar pars defects do not occur in this population and should not be considered as a rare but potentially treatable cause of new onset low back pain in adults. This study demonstrated an overall prevalence of pars defects of 8.0% in our population. As demonstrated in previous studies, the male to female ratio of 1.5:1 was a statistically significant difference.


Subject(s)
Low Back Pain/diagnostic imaging , Low Back Pain/epidemiology , Lumbar Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging , Spondylosis/diagnostic imaging , Spondylosis/epidemiology , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Aged , Causality , Comorbidity , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , New Mexico/epidemiology , Reproducibility of Results , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Sensitivity and Specificity
5.
J Diabetes Complications ; 17(5): 269-78, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12954156

ABSTRACT

Cardiac ischemia is a serious complication of type 2 diabetes. However, the pathophysiology underlying the increased severity of myocardial ischemia in diabetes is not clear. This study tested the hypothesis that platelet adhesion protein expression is chronically increased in older type 2 diabetic patients with established ischemic heart disease (IHD) compared to age-matched, nondiabetic patients with IHD. We compared the chronic expression of two platelet adhesion proteins, P-selectin and GPIIb/IIIa, in whole blood and the platelet reactivity to an acute stimulus. We found that the expression of platelet P-selectin was chronically increased in the nondiabetic patients with IHD compared to normal subjects. P-selectin expression was further increased in the diabetic patients with IHD compared to the nondiabetic IHD patients (P<.05). The results were stratified to examine the potential effect of aspirin usage on adhesion protein expression. We found that the expression of the activated GPIIb/IIIa complex was significantly reduced in those diabetic cardiac patients who were taking aspirin (P<.05). These findings indicate that, in patients with IHD, platelet adhesion proteins are chronically expressed and that the level of expression is increased more in IHD patients with type 2 diabetes. This complication of diabetes may exacerbate thrombus formation during a recurrent event, increasing the severity of ischemic injury. The results give further support to the use of aspirin in type 2 diabetics with established cardiac disease.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/blood , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Myocardial Ischemia/blood , P-Selectin/blood , Platelet Activation/physiology , Platelet Adhesiveness , Platelet Glycoprotein GPIIb-IIIa Complex/analysis , Biomarkers/blood , Flow Cytometry , Humans , Male , P-Selectin/drug effects , Platelet Activating Factor/pharmacology , Platelet Activation/drug effects , Platelet Adhesiveness/drug effects , Reference Values
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