17 results on '"Hanns Moshammer"'
Search Results
2. Determinants of Exposure to Acrylamide in European Children and Adults Based on Urinary Biomarkers: Results from the 'European Human Biomonitoring Initiative' Hbm4eu Participating Studies
- Author
-
Sandra F. Fernández, Michael Poteser, Eva Govarts, Olga Pardo, Clara Coscollà, Thomas Schettgen, Nina Vogel, Till Weber, Aline Murawski, Marike Kolossa-Gehring, Maria Ruether, Phillipp Schmidt, Sonia Namorado, An vanNieuwenhuyse, Brice Appenzeller, Kristín Ólafsdóttir, Thorhallur Halldorsson, Line S. Haug, Cathrine Thomsen, Fabio Barbone, Marika Mariuz, Valentina Rosolen, Loic Rambaud, Margaux RIOU, Thomas Göen, Stefanie Nübler, Moritz Schäfer, Karin Haji-Abbas-Zarrabi, Ovnair Sepai, Laura Rodriguez Martin, Greet Schoeters, Liese Gilles, Karin Leander, Hanns Moshammer, Agneta Akesson, and Federica Laguzzi
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Perfluoroctanoic acid (PFOA) enhances NOTCH-signaling in an angiogenesis model of placental trophoblast cells
- Author
-
Michael Poteser, Hans-Peter Hutter, Lisbeth Weitensfelder, and Hanns Moshammer
- Subjects
Cell type ,Angiogenesis ,Notch signaling pathway ,Neovascularization, Physiologic ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Fluorocarbons ,Receptors, Notch ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Trophoblast ,Embryonic stem cell ,Trophoblasts ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Cell culture ,Toxicity ,Female ,Caprylates ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Exposure to perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) was found to be associated with several pathological endpoints, including high cholesterol levels, specific defective functions of the immune system and reduced birth weight. While environmental PFAS have been recognized as threats for public health, surprisingly little is known about the underlying mechanisms of toxicity. We hypothesized that some of the observed vascular and developmental effects of environmental PFAS may share a common molecular pathway. At elevated levels of exposure to PFAS, a reduction in mean birth weight of newborns has been observed in combination with a high incidence rate of preeclampsia. As both, preeclampsia and reduced birth weight are consequences of an inadequate placental vascularization, we hypothesized that the adaptation of placental vasculature may get compromised by PFAS. We analyzed pseudo-vascular network formation and protein expression in the HTR8/SVneo cell line, an embryonic trophoblast cell type that is able to form vessel-like vascular networks in 3D-matrices, similar to endothelial cells. PFOA (perfluoroctanoic acid), but not PFOS (perfuoroctanesulfonic acid), induced morphological changes in the vascular 3D-network structure, without indications of compromised cellular viability. Incubation with PFOA reduced cellular sprouting and elongated isolated stalks in pseudo-vascular networks, while a γ-secretase inhibitor BMS-906024 induced directional opposite effects. We found a PFOA-induced increase in NOTCH intracellular domain (NICD) abundance in HTR8/SVneo, indicating that PFOA enhances NOTCH-signaling in this cell type. Enhancement of NOTCH-pathway by PFOA may be a key to understand the mode of action of PFAS, as this pathway is critically involved in many confirmed physiological/toxicological symptoms associated with PFAS exposure.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Impact of air pollution on symptom severity during the birch, grass and ragweed pollen period in Vienna, Austria: Importance of O3 in 2010–2018
- Author
-
Hanns Moshammer, Hans-Peter Hutter, Markus Berger, Maximilian Bastl, Katharina Bastl, Lukas Dirr, and Wolfgang Gstöttner
- Subjects
Ragweed ,Allergy ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,Air pollution ,010501 environmental sciences ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Pollen ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,education ,Air quality index ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Pollutant ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Pollution ,Ragweed pollen - Abstract
Air pollution is a threat to the general population, especially to pollen allergy sufferers in urban environments. Different air quality parameters have hitherto been examined which add to the burden of pollen allergy sufferers. Parameters such as NO2, SO2, PM10, PM2.5, and O3 are supposed to have additional impact, not only on health in general (increase in asthma, allergy sensitization frequency), but also on pollen grains (increase of allergenicity). However, it remains unknown if those air quality parameters increase symptom severity during the pollen season. We selected the birch, grass, and ragweed pollen seasons as different time periods throughout the year and analyzed the relationship of symptom data to pollen, air quality, and meteorological data (temperature, relative humidity) for the metropolis of Vienna (Austria). A linear regression model was computed based on different symptom data, and both pollen and air quality data were tested simultaneously. Ozone was positively and significantly associated with symptom scores in all three seasons, whereas this was only rarely the case with other pollutants. Therefore, only ozone was selected for further analysis in a model including meteorological parameters. In this model, effect estimates of ozone were attenuated but remained significant for the grass pollen season. The lack of significance in the other seasons may be attributed to the less numerous symptom data entries and the shorter duration of the pollen seasons for birch and ragweed. All other air quality parameters usually showed lower concentrations during the pollen seasons and displayed little variation. This might explain the lack of a clear signal. Our results suggest that today’s allergic population is already affected by air quality (rising O3 levels). Air quality should be considered as well in pollen information and pollen allergy studies in general because of its increasing importance in the light of global warming.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Diagnostic Reference Levels for computed tomography in Austria: A 2018 nationwide survey on adult patients
- Author
-
David Wachabauer, Florian Röthlin, Peter Homolka, and Hanns Moshammer
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Thorax ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed ,Dose Length Product ,Computed tomography ,Radiation Dosage ,Nationwide survey ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reference Values ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Adult patients ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Patient data ,Quartile ,Austria ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Purpose To define National Diagnostic Reference Levels (NDRLs) for computed tomography (CT) for Austria on adult patients. Method In the course of a nationwide survey on common CT-examinations between June 2018 and November 2018, datasets were requested from all Austrian hospitals and radiology centers with CT-scanners. All facilities were asked to report a minimum sample of 10 representative dose length product (DLP) values per examination type and CT-scanner, including information about scan sequences, iterative reconstruction (IR) algorithms and, if available, patient data. Examination types included into the survey were the most common CT-indications for the anatomic regions head, facial bones, thorax, abdomen and pelvis. 3rd quartiles of CT-scanner median DLPs were calculated and compared to Austrian and international NDRLs. Results For 76 % of all operating CT-scanners, DLP data was submitted varying from 13 to 172 scanners per examination type. Mean year of manufacture of the CT-scanners was 2011, ranging from 2003 to 2018. In 66 % of the examinations, IR was used. 3rd quartile is on average 21 % lower for scanners using IR algorithms as opposed to scanners or protocols not using IR. In the case of gender differences, the DLP for females is on average 17 % lower than for males. Conclusions The new recommendations for CT NDRLs for Austria based on a nationwide survey are on average 13 % lower than the current Austrian NDRLs and correspond well to recent German and Swiss NDRLs. 3rd quartiles for DLP are dependent on gender, the use of IR and year of manufacture of the CT-scanners.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Exposure to perfluoralkyl substances and their potential impact on fetal growth
- Author
-
Bettina Grasl-Kraupp, Harald Zeisler, Martin Forsthuber, Maria Uhl, Claudia Gundacker, Hanns Moshammer, Isabella Ellinger, Sebastian Granitzer, Raimund Widhalm, Hans Salzer, Philipp Fössleitner, Anna Gutsohn, and Markus Hengstschläger
- Subjects
Andrology ,Potential impact ,Reproductive Medicine ,Chemistry ,Fetal growth ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Urinary levoglucosan levels in Austrian communities differing in agrarian quota
- Author
-
Michael Kundi, M. Schmutzer, Hanns Moshammer, Sigrid Scharf, Philipp Hohenblum, Peter Wallner, Hans-Peter Hutter, and Stefan Weiss
- Subjects
Adult ,Wood smoke ,Urine ,Population density ,Toxicology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Smoke ,Biomonitoring ,Humans ,Child ,Cotinine ,Population Density ,Pyrenes ,Levoglucosan ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Agriculture ,Middle Aged ,Wood ,Sugar anhydride ,Agrarian society ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Austria ,Environmental chemistry ,Ambient monitoring ,Female ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Levoglucosan is a sugar anhydride produced by combustion of carbohydrates. In ambient monitoring it serves as an indicator for wood smoke. Its use in human biomonitoring, however, is not yet widespread. This study investigated whether levoglucosan in urine is a suitable biomarker for regional differences in wood smoke exposure in the winter season. Within the first Austrian biomonitoring survey, pooled urine samples from mothers as well as children of five communities of different size (two-stage random stratified sampling) were analysed by HPLC. As an indicator of exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) that are also prevalent in wood smoke, 1-hydroxypyrene was determined. In each town levoglucosan was found in higher levels in the pooled children's samples than in the pooled mothers’ samples. It correlated well with the agrarian quota. 1-Hydroxypyrene concentrations were higher in areas with higher population density. Correlation of urinary levoglucosan concentrations with the agrarian quota may be explained by higher wood smoke exposure in communities with higher agrarian quota. To our knowledge this study is the first investigation on this issue in Europe. It indicates that human biomonitoring of levoglucosan may be suitable to detect differences in regional exposure to wood smoke.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Which metric of ambient ozone to predict daily mortality?
- Author
-
Hans-Peter Hutter, Hanns Moshammer, and Michael Kundi
- Subjects
Pollutant ,Atmospheric Science ,Ozone ,Names of the days of the week ,Diurnal temperature variation ,Cause specific mortality ,Atmospheric sciences ,Ambient ozone ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Climatology ,Environmental science ,Nitrogen dioxide ,Time series ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
It is well known that ozone concentration is associated with daily cause specific mortality. But which ozone metric is the best predictor of the daily variability in mortality? We performed a time series analysis on daily deaths (all causes, respiratory and cardiovascular causes as well as death in elderly 65+) in Vienna for the years 1991–2009. We controlled for seasonal and long term trend, day of the week, temperature and humidity using the same basic model for all pollutant metrics. We found model fit was best for same day variability of ozone concentration (calculated as the difference between daily hourly maximum and minimum) and hourly maximum. Of these the variability displayed a more linear dose–response function. Maximum 8 h moving average and daily mean value performed not so well. Nitrogen dioxide (daily mean) in comparison performed better when previous day values were assessed. Same day ozone and previous day nitrogen dioxide effect estimates did not confound each other. Variability in daily ozone levels or peak ozone levels seem to be a better proxy of a complex reactive secondary pollutant mixture than daily average ozone levels in the Middle European setting. If this finding is confirmed this would have implications for the setting of legally binding limit values.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Pollution gets personal! A first population-based human biomonitoring study in Austria
- Author
-
Wolfgang Raffesberg, Hanns Moshammer, Brigitte Piegler, Philipp Hohenblum, Birgit Vallant, Michael Kundi, Stefan Weiss, Daniela Haluza, Sigrid Scharf, Peter Wallner, Hans-Peter Hutter, Wolfgang Moche, and Philipp Steinbichl
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pollution ,Cross-sectional study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Phthalic Acids ,Urine ,Population based ,Hazardous Substances ,Phosphates ,Toxicology ,Polybrominated diphenyl ethers ,Phenols ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Biomonitoring ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Humans ,Benzhydryl Compounds ,Child ,education ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Chemistry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Methylmercury Compounds ,Middle Aged ,Stratified sampling ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Austria ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Environmental Pollution ,Environmental Monitoring ,Hair - Abstract
Humans are exposed to a broad variety of man-made chemicals. Human biomonitoring (HBM) data reveal the individual body burden irrespective of sources and routes of uptake. A first population-based study was started in Austria in 2008 and was finished at the end of May 2011. This cross sectional study aims at documenting the extent, the distribution and the determinants of human exposure to industrial chemicals as well as proving the feasibility of a representative HBM study. Overall, 150 volunteers (50 families) were selected by stratified random sampling. Exposure to phthalates, trisphosphates, polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE), bisphenol A (along with nonyl- and octyl phenol) and methyl mercury was assessed. Sixteen of 18 PBDE determined were detected above the limit of quantification (LOQ) in blood samples with #153 and #197 the most abundant species. Bisphenol A in urine was measured in a subsample of 25 with only 4 samples found above the LOQ. In 3 of 100 urine samples at least one of 8 trisphosphate compounds assessed was above the LOQ. These first analytical results of the human biomonitoring data show that the body burden of the Austrian population with respect to the assessed compounds is comparable to or even lower than in other European countries. Overall, the study revealed that in order to develop a feasible protocol for representative human biomonitoring studies procedures have to be optimized to allow for non-invasive sampling of body tissues in accordance with the main metabolic pathways. Procedures of participants’ recruitment were, however, labor intensive and have to be improved.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Long term success of short smoking cessation seminars supported by occupational health care
- Author
-
Manfred Neuberger and Hanns Moshammer
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Occupational Health Services ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Toxicology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Occupational safety and health ,Social support ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Recurrence ,medicine ,Humans ,Cotinine ,Psychiatry ,education ,Aged ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Teaching ,Body Weight ,Smoking ,Middle Aged ,Abstinence ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Long-term care ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Spouse ,Smoking cessation ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,business ,Demography - Abstract
The objective of this longitudinal (3 year) study was to determine predictors of abstinence in 515 employees of a steel plant (28% female, age 18-67 years) after participation in Allen Carr seminars (intensive group counselling in a single session of 6 h). Answers given in computer aided phone interviews were analysed by stepwise and Cox regression. Of 510 responding persons 262 (51.4%) reported continuing abstinence. In a random sample of 61 respondents cotinine concentration in urine was measured, showing high agreement with smoking history. Social support increased abstinence, which was more persistent in males and office workers. Also in female participants the non-smoking spouse was a significant predictor for abstinence while a higher body weight predicted relapse. Relapsed female smokers did not show a sustainable reduction of cigarette consumption. Compared to cessation clinics higher population coverage would be achievable by workplace seminars. Every second smoker motivated to participate seems to be able to quit even without medication and to stay abstinent. Especially in females these seminars should be followed by physical exercise and continued support of gender specific occupational health care.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Gas cooking and reduced lung function in school children
- Author
-
Hans-Peter Hutter, Hanns Moshammer, and Manfred Neuberger
- Subjects
Spirometry ,Atmospheric Science ,Waste management ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Gaseous pollutants ,law.invention ,Incineration ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Fuel gas ,law ,Environmental health ,Ventilation (architecture) ,Medicine ,Nitrogen dioxide ,business ,Respiratory health ,Lung function ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Rationale Outdoor nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) is associated with reduced respiratory health. This could be due to a unique biological effect of this gaseous pollutant or because it serves as a surrogate of fine particles from incineration sources. Cooking with gas in small kitchens produces high concentrations of gaseous irritants (mainly nitrogen dioxide), but not fine particles. Objectives To study the relative impact of cooking with gas on lung function parameters in a cross sectional study of school children. Methods Nearly all elementary school children (2898 children aged 6–10 years) living in the city of Linz (capital of Upper Austria) underwent lung function testing. In a questionnaire administered simultaneously to their parents, information on household conditions including cooking and tobacco smoke exposure was collected. Impact of cooking with gas on lung function controlling for various confounders was analyzed using loglinear multiple regression. Results Gas cooking reduced lung function parameters ranging from 1.1% (not significant) for MEF 25 up to 3.4% ( p = 0.01 ) for peak expiratory flow (PEF). Conclusions Gas stoves can have an adverse impact on children's respiratory health. Parents and caretakers should be advised to insure good ventilation while and after cooking, especially in small and poorly ventilated rooms. This study adds to the growing evidence that gaseous pollutants from incineration sources affect respiratory health directly.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Blood concentrations of polycyclic musks in healthy young adults
- Author
-
Michael Kundi, G. Lorbeer, W. Hartl, Hanns Moshammer, Peter Wallner, Hans-Peter Hutter, and R. Sattelberger
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Sex Factors ,Blood plasma ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Benzopyrans ,Galaxolide ,Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons ,Young adult ,Chromatography ,Human blood ,Traditional medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Plasma levels ,Cashmeran ,Pollution ,Perfume ,chemistry ,Lotion ,Female ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry - Abstract
Knowledge on the concentration of polycyclic musk fragrance compounds in human blood is sparse. This study examined the concentrations of six polycyclic musks in blood samples from healthy volunteers. Blood was taken from hundred healthy students of the Medical University of Vienna. The lipophilic fraction was extracted and after purification analyzed by GC-MS. Study participants also completed a questionnaire on the use of cosmetics, about nutrition and other life-style aspects. Two compounds -- galaxolide and tonalide -- were identified in higher percentages of the blood plasma samples. Maximum plasma levels over 100 ng/l were also only found for galaxolide (4100 ng/l) and tonalide (800 ng/l). Women showed significantly higher levels than men. In a statistical multivariate approach only use of body lotion and age were predictive of positive galaxolide concentrations. For tonalide no significant predictor could be found. The findings mirror the replacement of nitro musk fragrances by polycyclic musks, mainly galaxolide. The high concentrations of galaxolide in human blood raise concern since few toxicological data are available.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Total pollen counts do not influence active surface measurements
- Author
-
Herwig Schinko, Hanns Moshammer, and Manfred Neuberger
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Meteorology ,Particle number ,Chemistry ,Diurnal temperature variation ,Active surface ,medicine.disease_cause ,Aerosol ,Animal science ,Pollen ,medicine ,Particle ,Particle size ,General Environmental Science ,Bioaerosol - Abstract
We investigated the temporal association of various aerosol parameters with pollen counts in the pollen season (April 2001) in Linz, Austria. We were especially interested in the relationship between active surface (or Fuchs’ surface) because we had shown previously (Atmos. Environ. 37 (2003) 1737–1744) that this parameter during the same observation period was a better predictor for acute respiratory symptoms in school children (like wheezing, shortness of breath, and cough) and reduced lung function on the same day than particle mass (PM 10 ). While active surface is most sensitive for fine particles with a diameter of less than 100 nm it has no strict upper cut-off regarding particle size and so could eventually be influenced also by larger particles if their numbers were high. All particle mass parameters tested (TSP, PM 10 , PM 1 ) were weakly ( r approximately 0.2) though significantly correlated with pollen counts but neither was active surface nor total particle counts (CPC). The weak association of particle mass and pollen counts was due mainly to similar diurnal variations and a linear trend over time. Only the mass of the coarse fraction (TSP minus PM 10 ) remained associated with pollen counts significantly after controlling for these general temporal patterns.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Acute effects of particulate matter on respiratory diseases, symptoms and functions
- Author
-
Boštjan Gomišček, Friedrich Horak, M. Neuberger, H. Puxbaum, Hanns Moshammer, Thomas Frischer, Michael Kundi, H. Hauck, and Michael G. Schimek
- Subjects
Acute effects ,Atmospheric Science ,COPD ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Environmental engineering ,Particulates ,medicine.disease ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Respiratory function ,Rural area ,Respiratory system ,business ,Respiratory health ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
To examine hypotheses regarding health effects of particulate matter, we conducted time series studies in Austrian urban and rural areas. Of the pollutants measured, ambient PM 2.5 was most consistently associated with parameters of respiratory health. Time series studies applying semiparametric generalized additive models showed significant increases of respiratory hospital admissions (ICD 490-496) at age 65 and older. The early increase of 5.5% in Vienna at a lag of 2 days in males and of 5.6% per 10 μg/m 3 at a lag of 3 days in females was not observed in a nearby rural area. Another increase of respiratory admissions (mainly COPD) was observed after a lag of 10–11 days. A time series on a panel of 56 healthy preschool children showed a significant impact of the carbonaceous fraction of PM 2.5 on tidal breathing pattern assessed by inductive plethysmography. In repeated oscillometric measurements of respiratory resistance in 164 healthy elementary school children not only immediate responses to fine particulates were found but also latent ones, possibly indicating inflammatory changes in airways. It may be speculated that the improvements of urban air quality prevented measurable effects on respiratory mortality. More sensitive indicators, however, still show acute impairments of respiratory function and health in elderly and children which are associated with fine particulates and subfractions related to motor traffic.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The active surface of suspended particles as a predictor of lung function and pulmonary symptoms in Austrian school children
- Author
-
Hanns Moshammer and Manfred Neuberger
- Subjects
Spirometry ,Atmospheric Science ,Vital capacity ,Evening ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Meteorology ,business.industry ,Suspended particles ,Active surface ,medicine.disease ,Aerosol ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,business ,Lung function ,General Environmental Science ,Asthma - Abstract
At a central elementary school in the capital of Upper Austria children aged 7–10 years underwent repeated respiratory health checkups (questionnaires, diaries, spirometry). Between March and May 2001 the daily means of the signals of a diffusion charging sensor, measuring the “active surface” of suspended particles, and a photoelectric aerosol sensor, measuring the particle-bound polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, were related to spirometric results of the total 164 children examined and to the daily symptom scores of a susceptible subgroup. Significant reductions of forced vital capacity ( p =0.006) and forced expiratory volume in the first second ( p =0.001) and significant increases of wheezing ( p =0.001), shortness of breath ( p =0.041), cough in the evening ( p =0.031) and at night ( p =0.018) were found with increase of “active surface” of suspended particles measured at the adjacent outdoor monitoring station, but not with the increase of particle-bound polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Monitoring “active surface” of particles with diameters of about 10 nm–1 μm by means of a diffusion charging sensor might provide additional information in surveillance of particulate matter for prevention of acute effects on respiratory health.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Declining ambient air pollution and lung function improvement in Austrian children
- Author
-
Michael Kundi, Manfred Neuberger, and Hanns Moshammer
- Subjects
Spirometry ,Atmospheric Science ,Vital capacity ,Passive smoking ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Ambient air pollution ,business.industry ,Outdoor air quality ,Environmental engineering ,Anthropometry ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine ,Population study ,business ,Socioeconomic status ,General Environmental Science ,Demography - Abstract
Three thousand four hundred fifty-one Austrian elementary school children were examined (between 2 and 8 times) by spirometry by standardized methods, over a 5 yr period. The districts where they lived were grouped into those where NO 2 declined during this period (by at least 30 μg/m 3 measured as half year means) and those with less or no decline in ambient NO 2 . In both groups of districts, SO 2 and TSP fell by similar amounts over this period. A continuous improvement of MEF25 (maximum exspiratory flow rate at 25% vital capacity) was found in districts with declining ambient NO 2 . Populations did not differ in respect of anthropometric factors, passive smoking or socioeconomic status. A birth cohort from this study population which was followed up to age 18 confirmed the improved growth of MEF25 with decline in NO 2 , while the improved growth of forced vital capacity was more related to decline in SO 2. This study provides the first evidence that improvements in the outdoor air quality during the 1980s are correlated with health benefits, and suggest that adverse effects on lung function related to ambient air pollution are reversible before adulthood. Improvement of small airway functions appeared to be more dependent on reductions of NO 2 than reduction in SO 2 and TSP.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Sex ratio in the children of the Austrian chloracne cohort
- Author
-
Hanns Moshammer and Manfred Neuberger
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cohort Studies ,Chloracne ,Maternal Exposure ,Austria ,Occupational Exposure ,Acne Vulgaris ,Paternal Exposure ,Cohort ,medicine ,Humans ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Sex Ratio ,business ,Sex ratio - Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.