7 results on '"Heikkila, P"'
Search Results
2. Controlling nucleation in ultrasonic cleaning of textile
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de Mol van Otterloo, P.H., Nierstrasz, Vincent, Warmoeskerken, Marinus, Salonen, R., and Heikkila, P.
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METIS-246639 - Published
- 2007
3. Mortality from obstructive lung diseases and exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons among asphalt workers
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Burstyn, I., Boffetta, P., Heederik, D.J.J., Partanen, T.J., Kromhout, H., Svane, O., Langard, S., Frentzel-Beyme, R., Kauppinen, T., Stucker, I., Shaham, J., Ahrens, W., Cenee, S., Ferro, G., Heikkila, P., Hooiveld, M., Johansen, C., Randem, B., Schill, W., Universiteit Utrecht, Faculteit Diergeneeskunde, Secretariat, U754, Division of Occupational and Environmental Health, Institute for Risk Assessment (IRAS), Utrecht University [Utrecht], Unit of Environment Cancer Epidemiology, IARC, Unit of Excellence for Psychosocial Factors, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Danish Working Environment Service, Centre for Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Riskhospitalet University Hospital, Bremen Institute for Prevention Research and Social Medicine, Recherches épidémiologiques et statistiques sur l'environnement et la santé., Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Occupational Cancer Department, National Institute of Occupational and Environmental Health, Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Danish Cancer Society, Universiteit Utrecht, and Faculteit Diergeneeskunde
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Male ,Chronic bronchitis ,Pathology ,Epidemiology ,Abbreviations: ICD-9 ,MESH: Risk Assessment ,MESH: Occupational Exposure ,Cohort Studies ,Ninth Revision ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Road Construction Workers’ Exposure Matrix ,Determinants in Health and Disease [EBP 1] ,Israel ,Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons ,MESH: Cohort Studies ,Coal Tar ,Inhalation Exposure ,MESH: Time ,Respiratory disease ,MESH: Israel ,MESH: Follow-Up Studies ,Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon ,Causality ,Europe ,Occupational Diseases ,Benzo(a)pyrene ,Bronchitis ,MESH: Inhalation Exposure ,ICD-9 ,medicine.drug ,MESH: Occupational Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronacrisis-Taverne ,MESH: Coal Tar ,MESH: Causality ,Risk Assessment ,ICD-9 [Abbreviations] ,Time ,Occupational medicine ,MESH: Polycyclic Hydrocarbons, Aromatic ,International Classification of Diseases ,Interventional oncology [UMCN 1.5] ,Occupational Exposure ,Environmental health ,polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon ,MESH: Hydrocarbons ,MESH: Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung Diseases, Obstructive ,Coal tar ,Asthma ,MESH: Humans ,business.industry ,PAH ,medicine.disease ,Hydrocarbons ,MESH: Male ,respiratory tract diseases ,ROCEM ,chemistry ,[SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,MESH: Europe ,business ,Aromatic ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext Work in the asphalt industry has been associated with nonmalignant respiratory morbidity and mortality, but the evidence is not consistent. A historical cohort of asphalt workers included 58,862 men (911,209 person-years) first employed between 1913 and 1999 in companies applying and mixing asphalt in Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands, and Norway. The relations between mortality from nonmalignant respiratory diseases (including the obstructive lung diseases: chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and asthma) and specific chemical agents and mixtures were evaluated using a study-specific exposure matrix. Mortality from obstructive lung diseases was associated with the estimated cumulative and average exposures to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and coal tar (p values of the test for linear trend = 0.06 and 0.01, respectively). The positive association between bitumen fume exposure and mortality from obstructive lung diseases was weak and not statistically significant; confounding by simultaneous exposure to coal tar could not be excluded. The authors lacked data on smoking and full occupational histories. In conclusion, exposures to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, originating from coal tar and possibly from bitumen fume, may have contributed to mortality from obstructive lung diseases among asphalt workers, but confounding and bias cannot be ruled out as an explanation for the observed associations.
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- 2003
4. Estimating exposures in the asphalt industry for an international epidemiological cohort study of cancer risk
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Burstyn, I., Boffetta, P., Kauppinen, T., Heikkila, P., Svane, O., Partanen, T.A., Stucker, I., Frentzel-Beyme, R., Ahrens, W., Merzenich, H., Heederik, D.J.J., Hooiveld, M., Langard, S., Randem, B.G., Jarvholm, B., Bergdahl, I.A., Shaham, J., Ribak, J., Kromhout, H., Division of Occupational and Environmental Health, Institute for Risk Assessment (IRAS), Utrecht University [Utrecht], Unit of Environment Cancer Epidemiology, IARC, Unit of Excellence for Psychosocial Factors, Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Danish Working Environment Service, Recherches épidémiologiques et statistiques sur l'environnement et la santé., Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Bremen Institute for Prevention Research and Social Medicine, Centre for Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Riskhospitalet University Hospital, Occupational Medicine, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umea University Hospital, Occupational Cancer Department, National Institute of Occupational and Environmental Health, Secretariat, U754, Universiteit Utrecht, and Faculteit Diergeneeskunde
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Coronacrisis-Taverne ,MESH: Epidemiologic Methods ,MESH: Risk Assessment ,complex mixtures ,Risk Assessment ,MESH: Occupational Exposure ,Cohort Studies ,exposure matrix ,Interventional oncology [UMCN 1.5] ,Occupational Exposure ,MESH: Hydrocarbons ,Determinants in Health and Disease [EBP 1] ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,tar ,Israel ,MESH: Cohort Studies ,bitumen ,Inhalation Exposure ,MESH: Humans ,Models, Statistical ,MESH: Israel ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Hydrocarbons ,respiratory tract diseases ,Europe ,[SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,MESH: Multicenter Studies as Topic ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,MESH: Europe ,MESH: Inhalation Exposure ,Epidemiologic Methods ,MESH: Models, Statistical - Abstract
Background An exposure matrix (EM) for known and suspected carcinogens was required for a multicenter international cohort study of cancer risk and bitumen among asphalt workers. Methods Production characteristics in companies enrolled in the study were ascertained through use of a company questionnaire (CQ). Exposures to coal tar, bitumen fume, organic vapor, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, diesel fume, silica, and asbestos were assessed semi‐quantitatively using information from CQs, expert judgment, and statistical models. Exposures of road paving workers to bitumen fume, organic vapor, and benzo(a)pyrene were estimated quantitatively by applying regression models, based on monitoring data, to exposure scenarios identified by the CQs. Results Exposures estimates were derived for 217 companies enrolled in the cohort, plus the Swedish asphalt paving industry in general. Most companies were engaged in road paving and asphalt mixing, but some also participated in general construction and roofing. Coal tar use was most common in Denmark and The Netherlands, but the practice is now obsolete. Quantitative estimates of exposure to bitumen fume, organic vapor, and benzo(a)pyrene for pavers, and semi‐quantitative estimates of exposure to these agents among all subjects were strongly correlated. Semi‐quantitative estimates of exposure to bitumen fume and coal tar exposures were only moderately correlated. EM assessed non‐monotonic historical decrease in exposures to all agents assessed except silica and diesel exhaust. Conclusions We produced a data‐driven EM using methodology that can be adapted for other multicenter studies. Am. J. Ind. Med. 43:3–17, 2003. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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- 2002
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5. Predictive value of p53, mdm-2, p21, and mib-1 for chemotherapy response in advanced breast cancer
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Sjostrom, J., Blomqvist, C., Heikkila, P., Boguslawski, K., Raisanen-Sokolowski, A., Bengtsson, No, Mjaaland, I., Malmstrom, P., Ostenstadt, B., Jonas Bergh, Wist, E., Valvere, V., and Saksela, E.
6. Cancer risk for European asphalt workers
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Partanen, T. J., Boffetta, P., Heikkila, P. R., Frentzel-Beyme, R. R., Heederik, D., Hours, M., Jarvholm, B. G., Kauppinen, T. P., Kromhout, H., Langard, S., Svane, O. B., Bernstein, M., Pier Alberto Bertazzi, Kogevinas, M., Neuberger, M. A., Pannett, B., and Sunyer, J.
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Road paving ,Epidemiology ,Bitumen ,Vakgroep Gezondheidsleer ,Luchtkwaliteit ,Feasibility study ,Environmental and Occupational Health Group ,Biomarkers ,Air Quality ,Exposure
7. Consistency of staining and reporting of oestrogen receptor immunocytochemistry within the European Union—an inter-laboratory study
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Fritz Rank, Janina Kulka, Thomas Decker, A. Reiner, Vincenzo Eusebi, Peter Regitnig, Gábor Cserni, Isabel Amendoeira, N Apostolikas, Manuela Lacerda, A.M. Tanous, S. Thorstenson, E. Saksela, C Munt, J. Martinez-Penuela, Clive A. Wells, Bettina Borisch, Giovanni Bussolati, Maria Drijkoningen, Simonetta Bianchi, D Coleman, Päivi Heikkilä, Johannes L. Peterse, John P. Sloane, C. de Miguel, Brigitte Sigal-Zafrani, C.E. Connolly, D Faverly, Jocelyne Jacquemier, Peter A. Dervan, Ian O. Ellis, Anna Sapino, C. W. Elston, Jean-Pierre Bellocq, Roland Holland, M Sylvan, Werner Boecker, E. Zozaya, H. Kerner, Wells CA, Sloane JP, Coleman D, Munt C, Amendoeira I, Apostolikas N, Bellocq JP, Bianchi S, Boecker W, Bussolati G, Connolly CE, Dervan P, Drijkoningen M, Ellis IO, Elston CW, Eusebi V, Faverly D, Heikkila P, Holland R, Jacqemier J, Lacerda M, Martinez-Penuela J, De Miguel C, Peterse JL, Rank F, Saksela E, Sigal-Zafrani B, Sylvan M, Borisch B, Cserni G, Decker T, Kerner H, Kulka J, Regitnig P, Sapino A, Tanous AM, Thorstenson S, and Zozaya E.
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Quality Control ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Concordance ,Immunocytochemistry ,Breast Neoplasms ,BREAST ,Oestrogen receptor ,Immunohistochemistry ,Quality assessment ,Variability ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European Union ,European union ,Inter-laboratory ,Molecular Biology ,media_common ,Staining and Labeling ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Anatomical pathology ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Staining ,Tumor microenvironment [UMCN 1.3] ,OESTROGEN RECEPTOR ,Receptors, Estrogen ,Female ,business ,Kappa - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 58820.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) To assess the variability of oestrogen receptor (ER) testing using immunocytochemistry, centrally stained and unstained slides from breast cancers were circulated to the members of the European Working Group for Breast Screening Pathology, who were asked to report on both slides. The results showed that there was almost complete concordance among readers (kappa=0.95) in ER-negative tumours on the stained slide and excellent concordance among readers (kappa=0.82) on the slides stained in each individual laboratory. Tumours showing strong positivity were reasonably well assessed (kappa=0.57 and 0.4, respectively), but there was less concordance in tumours with moderate and low levels of ER, especially when these were heterogeneous in their staining. Because of the variation, the Working Group recommends that laboratories performing these stains should take part in a external quality assurance scheme for immunocytochemistry, should include a tumour with low ER levels as a weak positive control and should audit the percentage positive tumours in their laboratory against the accepted norms annually. The Quick score method of receptor assessment may also have too many categories for good concordance, and grouping of these into fewer categories may remove some of the variation among laboratories.
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- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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