84 research outputs found

    The association between low level exposures to ambient air pollution and term low birth weight: a retrospective cohort study

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    BACKGROUND: Studies in areas with relatively high levels of air pollution have found some positive associations between exposures to ambient levels of air pollution and several birth outcomes including low birth weight (LBW). The purpose of this study was to examine the association between LBW among term infants and ambient air pollution, by trimester of exposure, in a region of lower level exposures. METHODS: The relationship between LBW and ambient levels of particulate matter up to 10 um in diameter (PM(10)), sulfur dioxide (SO(2)) and ground-level ozone (O(3)) was evaluated using the Nova Scotia Atlee Perinatal Database and ambient air monitoring data from the Environment Canada National Air Pollution Surveillance Network and the Nova Scotia Department of Environment. The cohort consisted of live singleton births (≥37 weeks of gestation) between January1,1988 and December31,2000. Maternal exposures to air pollution were assigned to women living within 25 km of a monitoring station at the time of birth. Air pollution was evaluated as a continuous and categorical variable (using quartile exposures) for each trimester and relative risks were estimated from logistic regression, adjusted for confounding variables. RESULTS: There were 74,284 women with a term, singleton birth during the study period and with exposure data. In the analyses unadjusted for year of birth, first trimester exposures in the highest quartile for SO(2 )and PM(10)suggested an increased risk of delivering a LBW infant (relative risk = 1.36, 95% confidence interval = 1.04 to 1.78 for SO(2 )exposure and relative risk = 1.33, 95% confidence interval = 1.02 to 1.74 for PM(10)). After adjustment for birth year, the relative risks were attenuated somewhat and not statistically significant. A dose-response relationship for SO(2 )was noted with increasing levels of exposure. No statistically significant effects were noted for ozone. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that exposure during the first trimester to relatively low levels of some air pollutants may be associated with a reduction in birth weight in term-born infants. These findings have implications for the development of effective risk management strategies to minimize the public health impacts for pregnant women

    Fetal Window of Vulnerability to Airborne Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons on Proportional Intrauterine Growth Restriction

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    Background: Although the entire duration of fetal development is generally considered a highly susceptible period, it is of public health interest to determine a narrower window of heightened vulnerability to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in humans. We posited that exposure to PAHs during the first trimester impairs fetal growth more severely than a similar level of exposure during the subsequent trimesters. Methods: In a group of healthy, non-smoking pregnant women with no known risks of adverse birth outcomes, personal exposure to eight airborne PAHs was monitored once during the second trimester for the entire cohort (n = 344), and once each trimester within a subset (n = 77). Both air monitoring and self-reported PAH exposure data were used in order to statistically estimate PAH exposure during the entire gestational period for each individual newborn. Results: One natural-log unit increase in prenatal exposure to the eight summed PAHs during the first trimester was associated with the largest decrement in the Fetal Growth Ratio (FGR) (23%, 95 % Confidence Interval (CI), 25 to20%), birthweight (2105 g, 95 % CI, 2188 to 222 g), and birth length (20.78 cm, 95 % CI, 21.30 to 20.26 cm), compared to the unit effects of PAHs during the subsequent trimesters, after accounting for confounders. Furthermore, a unit exposure during the first trimester was associated with the largest elevation in Cephalization Index (head to weight ratio) (3 mm/g, 95 % CI, 1 to 5 mm/g). PAH exposure was not associated with evidence of asymmetric growth restriction in this cohort

    A "Generalization" of the Logistic Curves and Long-Range Forecasts (1966-1991) of Residence Telephones

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    This paper investigates the development of a class of models suggested by an application of the logistic curve to model the growth of Bell System residence telephones. These models are expected to be more flexible than the "S"-shaped logistic curve. They allow the "potential expansion of growth" to be a function of a number of economic and sociological variables, e.g., the number of households, per capita disposable income, average revenue per telephone, etc. This approach resulted in the development of a useful model for forecasting Bell System residence telephones.

    NMR Analysis of a Conformational Transition in an Acyclic Peptide. Model System for Studying Helix Unfolding

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    The stabilization of helical structures in short apolar peptides is readily achieved by introduction of alpha,alpha-dialkylamino acids. The use of stereochemically constrained residues in conjunction with conformationally flexible segments permits the design of peptides that are poised to undergo structural transitions. The octapeptide Boc-Leu-Ac(8)c-Val-Gly-Gly-Leu-Ac(8)c-Val-OMe (Ac(8)c = 1-aminocyclooctane-1-carboxylic acid) incorporates residues with contradictory conformational tendencies. NMR analysis in CDCl3, using nuclear Overhauser effects and delineation of hydrogen-bonded NH groups establishes a 3(10)-helical conformation. In a polar strongly solvating medium, like DMSO, the helix unfolds. Studies in CDCl3/DMSO mixtures provide clear evidence for a solvent dependent conformational transition. Amide NH chemical shifts and temperature coefficients at varying solvent composition allow a detailed structural analysis of the unfolding process. The intrinsic fragility of the octapeptide helix provides an opportunity to examine invasion of the helix backbone by water molecules. Studies in DMSO solution containing low concentrations of water establish that preferential water peptide interactions may indeed be present
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