33 research outputs found

    A Strategy for Structuring and Reporting a Read-Across Prediction of Toxicity

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    Category formation, grouping and read across methods are broadly applicable in toxicological assessments and may be used to fill data gaps for chemical safety assessment and regulatory decisions. In order to facilitate a transparent and systematic approach to aid regulatory acceptance, a strategy to evaluate chemical category membership, to support the use of read-across predictions that may be used to fill data gaps for regulatory decisions is proposed. There are two major aspects of any read-across exercise, namely assessing similarity and uncertainty. While there can be an over-arching rationale for grouping organic substances based on molecular structure and chemical properties, these similarities alone are generally not sufficient to justify a read-across prediction. Further scientific justification is normally required to justify the chemical grouping, typically including considerations of bioavailability, metabolism and biological/mechanistic plausibility. Sources of uncertainty include a variety of elements which are typically divided into two main issues: the uncertainty associated firstly with the similarity justification and secondly the completeness of the read-across argument. This article focuses on chronic toxicity, whilst acknowledging the approaches are applicable to all endpoints. Templates, developed from work to prepare for the application of new toxicological data to read-across assessment, are presented. These templates act as proposals to assist in assessing similarity in the 50 context of chemistry, toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics as well as to guide the systematic characterisation of uncertainty both in the context of the similarity rationale, the read across data and overall approach and conclusion. Lastly, a workflow for reporting a read-across prediction is suggested

    Do suspended sediments modulate the effects of octylphenol on rainbow trout?

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    A system was devised which allows particles to remain in suspension in a conventional 60 L aquarium without undue disturbance to resident fish. Using this system, juvenile rainbow trout were exposed for one week to 4-tert-octylphenol (OP, 10-1000 µg/L) with or without the presence of suspended sediments (10-20 mg/L; collected from the River Calder, UK). About 8 % of the added OP partitioned to the solid phase. Vitellogenin levels were determined in the plasma of the exposed rainbow trout and showed a dose-dependent increase with regards to OP exposure concentration. Considerable variation in the vitellogenin response was observed between separate runs with the same OP concentration. There was no statistically significant (at P<0.05) difference in plasma VTG levels between the OP treatments with or without suspended sediments. This suggests that the dissolved concentration is the key factor and natural suspended sediment neither protects against, nor exacerbates, the endocrine disrupting effect of OP on fish

    Buckling analysis on the hull of the historic paddle steamer ‘Medway Queen’

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    This study presents modelling and finite element simulation and the subsequent buckling analysis on the the historic Medway Queen paddle steamer ship which is under reconstruction now. The objective of this study is to assess buckling strength of the hull plate due to the longitudinal stress in the hull plates of the Medway Queen under various sea and live load conditions. A beam finite element analysis with structural elements is utilised to assess shear stress and bending moments of the ship structure. The model predictions for longitudinal stresses in hull plates are combined with buckling assessments on the hull plates in different, judged to be the most critical, locations along the ship's length. The structural beam model is utilised to simulate the ship's stress behaviour under hogging and sagging conditions with three different wave heights and four sets of live loads. From the longitudinal bending moment and shear force of all 24 simulation cases, extreme locations are identified and critical buckling stress on the plates close to these locations is predicted and compared with actual axial and shear stresses on the hull plate to predict the condition at which the buckling structural failure occurs

    Emerging organic contaminants in groundwater : a review of sources, fate and occurrence

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    Emerging organic contaminants (EOCs) detected in groundwater may have adverse effects on human health and aquatic ecosystems. This paper reviews the existing occurrence data in groundwater for a range of EOCs including pharmaceutical, personal care, ‘life-style’ and selected industrial compounds. The main sources and pathways for organic EOCs in groundwater are reviewed, with occurrence data for EOCs in groundwater included from both targeted studies and broad reconnaissance surveys. Nanogram-microgram per litre concentrations are present in groundwater for a large range of EOCs as well as metabolites and transformation products and under certain conditions may pose a threat to freshwater bodies for decades due to relatively long groundwater residence times. In the coming decades, more of these EOCs are likely to have drinking water standards, environmental quality standards and/or groundwater threshold values defined, and therefore a better understanding of the spatial and temporal variation remains a priority

    The Interpretation of Drug Action through Linear Free Energy Relationships

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