116 results on '"Ball JC"'
Search Results
2. Atmospheric chemistry of 4 : 2 fluorotelomer alcohol (CF3(CF2)(3)CH2CH2OH): Products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation
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Hurley, MD, Ball, JC, Wallington, TJ, Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk, Ellis, DA, Martin, JW, Mabury, SA, Hurley, MD, Ball, JC, Wallington, TJ, Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk, Ellis, DA, Martin, JW, and Mabury, SA
- Abstract
Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the products and mechanism of the Cl atom initiated oxidation of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (CF3(CF2)(3)CH2CH2OH) in 700 Torr of N-2/O-2 diluent at 296 K. CF3(CF2)(3)CH2CHO is the sole primary oxidation product. CF3(CF2)(3)CHO, CF3(CF2)(3)CH2COOH, and CF3(CF2)(3)CH2C(O)OOH are secondary oxidation products. Further irradiation results in the formation of CF3(CF2)(3)COOH, COF2, and CF3OH. CF3(CF2)(3)CHO, CF3(CF2)(3)CH2COOH, and CF3(CF2)(3)CH2C(O)OOH are formed from CF3(CF2)(3)CH2CHO oxidation in yields of 46 27 and less than or equal to 27 respectively. Using relative rate techniques, a value of k(Cl + CF3(CF2)(3)CH2CHO) = (1.84 +/- 0.30) x 10(-11) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) was determined. The yield of the perfluorinated acid, CF3(CF2)(3)COOH, from the 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol increased with the diluent gas oxygen concentration. For the experimental conditions used herein and employing > 98% consumption of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol, the molar yields of CF3(CF2)(3)COOH were <0.011, 0.031, 0.042, and 0.056 in experiments conducted with 10, 140, 400, and 700 Torr O-2, respectively. These results suggest that the atmospheric oxidation of fluorotelomer alcohols may be a significant source of the perfluorinated carboxylic acids that are observed in remote areas.
- Published
- 2004
3. CF3CH(ONO)CF3: Synthesis, IR spectrum, and use as OH radical source for kinetic and mechanistic studies
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Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk, Hurley, MD, Ball, JC, Schneider, WF, Wallington, TJ, Nielsen, OJ, Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk, Hurley, MD, Ball, JC, Schneider, WF, Wallington, TJ, and Nielsen, OJ
- Abstract
The synthesis, IR spectrum, and first-principles characterization of CF3CH(ONO)CF3 as well as its use as an OH radical source in kinetic and mechanistic studies are reported. CF3CH(ONO)CF3 exists in two conformers corresponding to rotation about the RCO-NO bond. The more prevalent trans conformer accounts for the prominent IR absorption features at frequencies (cm(-1)) of 1766 (N=O stretch), 1302, 12 10, and 1119 (C-F stretches), and 761 (O-N-O bend); the cis conformer contributes a number of distinct weaker features. CF3CH(ONO)CF3 was readily photolyzed using fluorescent blacklamps to generate CF3C(O)CF3 and, by implication, OH radicals in 100% yield. CF3CH(ONO)CF3 photolysis is a convenient source of OH radicals in the studies of the yields of CO, CO2, HCHO, and HC(O)OH products which can be difficult to measure using more conventional OH radical sources (e.g., CH3ONO photolysis). CF3CH(ONO)CF3 photolysis was used to measure k(OH + C2H4)/k(OH + C3H6) = 0.29 +/- 0.01 and to establish upper limits of 16 and 6% for the molar yields of CO and HC(O)OH from the reaction of OH radicals with benzene in 700 Torr of air at 296 K. (C) 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2003
4. Atmospheric chemistry of C2F5CHO: mechanism of the C2F5C(O)O-2+HO2 reaction
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Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk, Hurley, MD, Wallington, TJ, Ball, JC, Martin, JW, Ellis, DA, Mabury, SA, Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk, Hurley, MD, Wallington, TJ, Ball, JC, Martin, JW, Ellis, DA, and Mabury, SA
- Abstract
Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the gas-phase reaction of C2F5C(O) with HO2 radicals in 100-700 Torr of air, or O-2, diluent at 296 K. The reaction proceeds by two pathways leading to formation of C2F5C(O)OH and O-3 in ayield of 24 +/- 4% and C2F5C(O)O radicals, OH radicals and O-2 in a yield of 76 +/- 4 The gas phase reaction of CnF2n+1C(O)O-2 with HO2 radicals offers a potential explanation for at least part of the observed environmental burden of fluorinated carboxylic acids, CnF2n+1C(O)OH. As part of this work an upper limit for the rate constant of reaction of Cl atorns with C2F5C(O)OH at 296 K was determined; k(Cl + C2F5C(O)OH) <1 x 10(-11) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1). (C) 2003 Published by Elsevier B.V.
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- 2003
5. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY OF HFCS AND HCFCS
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WALLINGTON, TJ, BALL, JC, HURLEY, MD, KAISER, EW, SCHNEIDER, WF, NIELSEN, OJ, SEHESTED, J, WALLINGTON, TJ, BALL, JC, HURLEY, MD, KAISER, EW, SCHNEIDER, WF, NIELSEN, OJ, and SEHESTED, J
- Published
- 1994
6. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY OF HFC-152 - UV ABSORPTION-SPECTRUM OF CH2FCFHO2 RADICALS, KINETICS OF THE REACTION CH2FCFHO2+NO-]CH2FCRFO+NO2, AND FATE OF THE ALKOXY RADICAL CH2FCFHO
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WALLINGTON, TJ, HURLEY, MD, BALL, JC, ELLERMANN, T, NIELSEN, OJ, SEHESTED, J, WALLINGTON, TJ, HURLEY, MD, BALL, JC, ELLERMANN, T, NIELSEN, OJ, and SEHESTED, J
- Published
- 1994
7. The Lexington Addicts, 1971–1972: Demographic Characteristics, Drug Use Patterns, and Selected Infectious Disease Experience
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Ball Jc, M. B. Pfeiffer, W. R. Lange, Frederick Snyder, and Edward J. Cone
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Cross-sectional study ,Kentucky ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,medicine.disease_cause ,Communicable Diseases ,Cohort Studies ,Sex Factors ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Infectious disease (athletes) ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Hepatitis B virus ,Hepatitis ,Heroin Dependence ,Illicit Drugs ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Immunology ,Cohort ,Female ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
The demographics, drug habits, and medical complications of a cohort of 1,129 addicts treated at Lexington in the period 1971-1972 were studied. These patients, admitted from 41 different states, had a mean period of addiction of 5.4 years. Over one-third of the sample had engaged in pimping or prostitution, and there were no differences by gender in terms of involvement. Eight-eight percent had shared injection equipment, and surprisingly, 78% admitted to some effort at sterilizing their "works." Hepatitis was the most common associated medical condition: 87% had serologic markers of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, 60% had evidence of hepatitis A virus (HAV) exposure, and 47% had abnormal liver function parameters. Gynecomastia was evident in 2% of male subjects. Thirteen percent of the sample had a reactive VDRL assay, but 64% of these were biologically false positive. Subtle abnormalities of immune function were also observed; 18% of the patients had recent unexplained weight loss, 6% had lymphadenopathy, 8% had leukopenia, and 2% had lymphocytopenia. We conclude that both HBV and HAV were important infectious disease risks in these addicts, and that many evidenced deficiencies in immune function well before AIDS became a major public health concern.
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- 1989
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8. Pretreatment source of income and response to methadone maintenance: a follow-up study
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O'Brien Cp, Rosen L, Ball Jc, and McLellan At
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Drug ,Adult ,Employment ,Male ,Methadone maintenance ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,Psychiatry ,media_common ,Legal status ,Earnings ,business.industry ,Follow up studies ,Public Assistance ,Pennsylvania ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Response to treatment ,Public assistance ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Unemployment ,Crime ,business ,Methadone ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The authors assessed the relationship between source of pretreatment income and response to treatment at 6-month follow-up in 165 male veterans admitted to a methadone maintenance treatment program. Subjects were grouped according to whether the majority of their pretreatment income was based on job earnings, public assistance, or criminal activity. Significant improvements in drug use, legal status, and psychological functioning were found in the employed group. The group supported by criminal activity showed the most significant and pervasive improvements, especially in the areas of drug use and family, legal, and employment problems. The group receiving public assistance showed no significant improvements on any of the 16 criterion measures, including drug use.
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- 1981
9. Reducing the Risk of AIDS Through Methadone Maintenance Treatment
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Friedman, Ball Jc, Myers Cp, and Lange Wr
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Needle sharing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Methadone maintenance ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,Narcotic antagonist ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Anesthesia ,Epidemiology ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Risk factor ,business ,Methadone ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In a three-year field study of methadone maintenance programs in New York City, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, treatment was found to be effective in reducing IV drug use and needle sharing among most heroin addicts. Of 388 patients who remained in treatment for one year or more, 71 percent had ceased IV use. Conversely, 82 percent of patients who left treatment relapsed rapidly to IV drug use. Marked differences in the effectiveness of various programs were observed: current IV use varied from less than 10 percent to over 57 percent of patients in particular treatment programs. This differential effectiveness was related both to length of patient's stay and to the quality of treatment provided. HIV seropositivity among high-risk drug users is related to frequency of injections and needle-sharing contacts. Effective methadone treatment can stop these practices, but a widespread impact on the AIDS epidemic will require improvement of treatment in many programs.
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- 1988
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10. Heroin addiction in New York state.
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Ball JC
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- 2004
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11. Impact of unscheduled nurse-led virtual care for people with diabetes on nursing practices and patient satisfaction.
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McCabe C, McCann M, Connolly D, McGrath J, Begley J, Ball JC, and Harris E
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Nurse's Role, Pandemics, Patient Satisfaction, Diabetes Mellitus
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic and its social restrictions accelerated the expansion of virtual clinical care, and this has been reported to be safe, low cost and flexible., Aim: This study aimed to examine nursing practices and patient satisfaction with unscheduled nurse-led virtual care for people with diabetes., Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive survey of clinical nurse specialists and patients was carried out, using an activities log for nursing practices and a satisfaction and enablement survey for callers., Findings: Patients reported high satisfaction levels and greater self-confidence in keeping themselves healthy after receiving virtual care. Most calls (74.8%) from patients were for advice and education. Each call led to an average of 2.5 actions for the clinical nurse specialist., Conclusion: The service is highly valued and is effective, but adds to the nurse workload burden.
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- 2024
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12. Outcomes of patients with refractory out-of-hospital cardiac arrest transported to an ECMO centre compared with transport to non-ECMO centres.
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Bernard SA, Hopkins SJ, Ball JC, Stub DA, Stephenson MW, Nanjayya VB, Pellegrino VA, Sheldrake J, Richardson AC, and Smith KL
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the outcomes of patients with refractory out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) transported to a hospital that provides extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) with patients transported to hospitals without ECPR capability. Design, setting: Retrospective review of patient care records in a pre-hospital and hospital setting. Participants: Adult patients with OHCA who left the scene and arrived with cardiopulmonary resuscitation in progress at 16 hospitals in Melbourne, Australia, between January 2016 and December 2019. Intervention: For selected patients transported to the ECPR centre, initiation of ECMO. Main outcome measures: Survival to hospital discharge and 12-month quality of life. Results: There were 223 eligible patients during the study period. Of 49 patients transported to the ECPR centre, 23 were commenced on ECMO. Of these, survival to hospital with good neurological recovery (Cerebral Performance Category [CPC] score 1/2) occurred in 4/23 patients. Four other patients developed return of spontaneous circulation in the ECPR centre before cannulation of whom one survived, giving overall good functional outcome at 12 months survival of 5/49 (10.2%). There were 174 patients transported to the 15 non-ECPR centres and 3/174 (2%) had good functional outcome at 12 months. After adjustment for baseline differences, the odds ratio for good neurological outcome after transport to an ECPR centre compared with a non-ECPR centre was 4.63 (95% CI, 0.97-22.11; P = 0.055). Conclusion: The survival rate of patients with refractory OHCA transported to an ECPR centre remains low. Outcomes in larger cities might be improved with shorter scene times and additional ECPR centres that would provide for earlier initiation of ECMO., Competing Interests: All authors declare that they do not have any potential conflict of interest in relation to this manuscript., (© 2022 College of Intensive Care Medicine of Australia and New Zealand.)
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- 2023
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13. Investigation of polymers and alcohols produced in oxidized soybean oil at frying temperatures.
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Hwang HS, Ball JC, Doll KM, Anderson JE, and Vermillion K
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- Cooking, Esters analysis, Hot Temperature adverse effects, Oxidation-Reduction, Alcohols analysis, Polymers analysis, Soybean Oil chemistry
- Abstract
Although significant amounts of polymers associated with adverse health effects in oils are produced during frying, the chemical bonds forming these polymers are not well understood. This study revealed that ester bonds are responsible for the polymerization of soybean oil during frying and heating at 175 °C. The ester value of soybean oil increased during frying up to day 3 of the experiment and slightly decreased on day 4 of the experiment indicating that esterification and hydrolysis concomitantly occurred. The
13 C NMR spectra showed further evidence of the formation of ester bonds. This study also examined unidentified chemical bonds in the polymer products, other than ester bonds, with NMR spectroscopy. No NMR signals indicating ether bonds were observed. The NMR study after the reaction of oxidized soybean oil with acetyl chloride clarified assignments of proton signals, confirming some previous assignments, and assigning a new proton signal as an alcohol., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)- Published
- 2020
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14. Synthesis of quaternary stereogenic centres via stereoselective intermolecular Friedel-Crafts reactions.
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Ball JC, Gleave R, and Jones S
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- Crystallography, X-Ray, Models, Molecular, Molecular Conformation, Pyrrolidonecarboxylic Acid chemistry, Stereoisomerism, Pyrrolidonecarboxylic Acid chemical synthesis
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Highly stereoselective Friedel-Crafts reactions have been performed using a chiral anthracene template to control the selectivity of the reaction. In the case of additions to fully substituted N-acyliminium ions, competitive elimination and condensation reactions were observed. Retro-Diels-Alder reaction of one of the reaction products led to a precursor that could be used for the construction of pyroglutamic acids bearing quaternary stereogenic centres.
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- 2011
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15. Comparison of plate counts, Petrifilm, dipslides, and adenosine triphosphate bioluminescence for monitoring bacteria in cooling-tower waters.
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Mueller SA, Anderson JE, Kim BR, and Ball JC
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- Luminescence, Adenosine Triphosphate chemistry, Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Bacteria isolation & purification, Colony Count, Microbial methods, Water Microbiology
- Abstract
Effective bacterial control in cooling-tower systems requires accurate and timely methods to count bacteria. Plate-count methods are difficult to implement on-site, because they are time- and labor-intensive and require sterile techniques. Several field-applicable methods (dipslides, Petrifilm, and adenosine triphosphate [ATP] bioluminescence) were compared with the plate count for two sample matrices--phosphate-buffered saline solution containing a pure culture of Pseudomonas fluorescens and cooling-tower water containing an undefined mixed bacterial culture. For the pure culture, (1) counts determined on nutrient agar and plate-count agar (PCA) media and expressed as colony-forming units (CFU) per milliliter were equivalent to those on R2A medium (p = 1.0 and p = 1.0, respectively); (2) Petrifilm counts were not significantly different from R2A plate counts (p = 0.99); (3) the dipslide counts were up to 2 log units higher than R2A plate counts, but this discrepancy was not statistically significant (p = 0.06); and (4) a discernable correlation (r2 = 0.67) existed between ATP readings and plate counts. For cooling-tower water samples (n = 62), (1) bacterial counts using R2A medium were higher (but not significant; p = 0.63) than nutrient agar and significantly higher than tryptone-glucose yeast extract (TGE; p = 0.03) and PCA (p < 0.001); (2) Petrifilm counts were significantly lower than nutrient agar or R2A (p = 0.02 and p < 0.001, respectively), but not statistically different from TGE, PCA, and dipslides (p = 0.55, p = 0.69, and p = 0.91, respectively); (3) the dipslide method yielded bacteria counts 1 to 3 log units lower than nutrient agar and R2A (p < 0.001), but was not significantly different from Petrifilm (p = 0.91), PCA (p = 1.00) or TGE (p = 0.07); (4) the differences between dipslides and the other methods became greater with a 6-day incubation time; and (5) the correlation between ATP readings and plate counts varied from system to system, was poor (r2 values ranged from < 0.01 to 0.47), and the ATP method was not sufficiently sensitive to measure counts below approximately 10(4) CFU/mL.
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- 2009
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16. Atmospheric chemistry of the Z and E isomers of CF3CF=CHF; kinetics, mechanisms, and products of gas-phase reactions with Cl atoms, OH radicals, and O3.
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Hurley MD, Ball JC, and Wallington TJ
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Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the atmospheric chemistry of the Z and E isomers of CF3CF=CHF, which we refer to as CF3CF=CHF(Z) and CF3CF=CHF(E). The rate constants k(Cl + CF3CF=CHF(Z)) = (4.36 +/- 0.48) x 10-11, k(OH + CF3CF=CHF(Z)) = (1.22 +/- 0.14) x 10-12, and k(O3 + CF3CF=CHF(Z)) = (1.45 +/- 0.15) x 10-21 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 were determined for the Z isomer of CF3CF=CHF in 700 Torr air diluent at 296 +/- 2 K. The rate constants k(Cl + CF3CF=CHF(E)) = (5.00 +/- 0.56) x 10-11, k(OH + CF3CF=CHF(E)) = (2.15 +/- 0.23) x 10-12, and k(O3 + CF3CF=CHF(E)) = (1.98 +/- 0.15) x 10-20 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 were determined for the E isomer of CF3CF=CHF in 700 Torr air diluent at 296 +/- 2 K. Both the Cl-atom and OH-radical-initiated atmospheric oxidation of CF3CF=CHF give CF3C(O)F and HC(O)F in molar yields indistinguishable from 100% for both the Z and E isomer. CF3CF=CHF(Z) has an atmospheric lifetime of approximately 18 days and a global warming potential (100 year time horizon) of approximately 6. CF3CF=CHF(E) has an atmospheric lifetime of approximately 10 days and a global warming potential (100 year time horizon) of approximately 3. CF3CF=CHF has a negligible global warming potential and will not make any significant contribution to radiative forcing of climate change.
- Published
- 2007
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17. Atmospheric chemistry of a model biodiesel fuel, CH3C(O)O(CH2)2OC(O)CH3: kinetics, mechanisms, and products of Cl atom and OH radical initiated oxidation in the presence and absence of NOx.
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Hurley MD, Ball JC, Wallington TJ, Toft A, Nielsen OJ, Bertman S, and Perkovic M
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- Free Radicals chemistry, Kinetics, Molecular Structure, Oxidation-Reduction, Spectrophotometry, Infrared, Atmosphere chemistry, Chlorine chemistry, Ethylene Glycols chemistry, Gasoline, Hydroxides chemistry, Models, Chemical, Nitrogen Oxides chemistry
- Abstract
Relative rate techniques were used to study the kinetics of the reactions of Cl atoms and OH radicals with ethylene glycol diacetate, CH3C(O)O(CH2)2OC(O)CH3, in 700 Torr of N2/O2 diluent at 296 K. The rate constants measured were k(Cl + CH3C(O)O(CH2)2OC(O)CH3) = (5.7 +/- 1.1) x 10(-12) and k(OH + CH3C(O)O(CH2)2OC(O)CH3) = (2.36 +/- 0.34) x 10(-12) cm3 molecule-1 s-1. Product studies of the Cl atom initiated oxidation of ethylene glycol diacetate in the absence of NO in 700 Torr of O2/N2 diluent at 296 K show the primary products to be CH3C(O)OC(O)CH2OC(O)CH3, CH3C(O)OC(O)H, and CH3C(O)OH. Product studies of the Cl atom initiated oxidation of ethylene glycol diacetate in the presence of NO in 700 Torr of O2/N2 diluent at 296 K show the primary products to be CH3C(O)OC(O)H and CH3C(O)OH. The CH3C(O)OCH2O* radical is formed during the Cl atom initiated oxidation of ethylene glycol diacetate, and two loss mechanisms were identified: reaction with O2 to give CH3C(O)OC(O)H and alpha-ester rearrangement to give CH3C(O)OH and HC(O) radicals. The reaction of CH3C(O)OCH2O2* with NO gives chemically activated CH3C(O)OCH2O* radicals which are more likely to undergo decomposition via the alpha-ester rearrangement than CH3C(O)OCH2O* radicals produced in the peroxy radical self-reaction.
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- 2007
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18. Microfabrication of screen-printed nanoliter vials with embedded surface-modified electrodes.
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Lenihan JS, Ball JC, Gavalas VG, Lumpp JK, Hines J, Daunert S, and Bachas LG
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- Electrochemistry, Lasers, Microchip Analytical Procedures methods, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Nitrates analysis, Nitrates chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction, Polymers chemistry, Pyrroles chemistry, Ruthenium Compounds chemistry, Surface Properties, Ion-Selective Electrodes, Lab-On-A-Chip Devices
- Abstract
A self-contained ion-selective sensing system within a nanoliter-volume vial has been developed by integrating screen printing, laser ablation, and molecular imprinting techniques. Screen printing and laser ablation are used in tandem to fabricate nanoliter-volume vials with carbon and Ag/AgCl ring electrodes embedded in the sidewalls. Using multisweep cyclic voltammetry, the surface of the carbon electrode can be modified with a polypyrrole film. By polymerizing pyrrole in the presence of nitrate, pores complementary to the nitrate anion in size, shape, and charge distribution are formed in the resulting film. Electrochemical cells modified with this nitrate-imprinted polypyrrole film show a near-Nernstian response to nitrate, and excellent reproducibility. The integration of molecular recognition and electrochemical response in the nanoliter vials is demonstrated by the detection of as little as 0.36 ng nitrate in nanoliter-volume samples. The integration of tailored molecular recognition within nanoliter vials via established fabrication and imprinting protocols should result in a number of nanosensor devices with applications in BioMEMS and micro total analysis systems.
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- 2007
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19. Atmospheric chemistry of n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)CHO (x = 1, 2, 3, 4): fate of n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O) radicals.
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Hurley MD, Ball JC, Wallington TJ, Sulbaek Andersen MP, Nielsen OJ, Ellis DA, Martin JW, and Mabury SA
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- Free Radicals chemistry, Peroxides chemistry, Air Pollutants chemistry, Aldehydes chemistry, Atmosphere chemistry, Carboxylic Acids chemistry, Fluorocarbons chemistry
- Abstract
Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the atmospheric fate of n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O) (x = 1, 2, 3, 4) radicals in 700 Torr O(2)/N(2) diluent at 298 +/- 3 K. A competition is observed between reaction with O(2) to form n-C(x)()F(2)(x)()(+1)C(O)O(2) radicals and decomposition to form n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1) radicals and CO. In 700 Torr O(2)/N(2) diluent at 298 +/- 3 K, the rate constant ratio, k(n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O) + O(2) --> n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O)O(2))/k(n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O) --> n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1) + CO) = (1.30 +/- 0.05) x 10(-17), (1.90 +/- 0.17) x 10(-19), (5.04 +/- 0.40) x 10(-20), and (2.67 +/- 0.42) x 10(-20) cm(3) molecule(-1) for x = 1, 2, 3, 4, respectively. In one atmosphere of air at 298 K, reaction with O(2) accounts for 99%, 50%, 21%, and 12% of the loss of n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O) radicals for x = 1, 2, 3, 4, respectively. Results are discussed with respect to the atmospheric chemistry of n-C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)C(O) radicals and their possible role in contributing to the formation of perfluorocarboxylic acids in the environment.
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- 2006
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20. Atmospheric chemistry of perfluoroaldehydes (CxF2x+1CHO) and fluorotelomer aldehydes (CxF2x+1CH2CHO): quantification of the important role of photolysis.
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Chiappero MS, Malanca FE, Argüello GA, Wooldridge ST, Hurley MD, Ball JC, Wallington TJ, Waterland RL, and Buck RC
- Abstract
The UV absorption spectra of CF(3)CHO, C(2)F(5)CHO, C(3)F(7)CHO, C(4)F(9)CHO, CF(3)CH(2)CHO, and C(6)F(13)CH(2)CHO were recorded over the range 225-400 nm at 249-297 K. C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)CHO and C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)CH(2)CHO have broad absorption features centered at 300-310 and 290-300 nm, respectively. The strength of the absorption increases with the size of the C(x)F(2)(x)(+1) group. There was no discernible (<5%) effect of temperature on the UV spectra. Quantum yields for photolysis at 254 and 308 nm were measured. Quantum yields at 254 nm were 0.79 +/- 0.09 (CF(3)CHO), 0.81 +/- 0.09 (C(2)F(5)CHO), 0.63 +/- 0.09 (C(3)F(7)CHO), 0.60 +/- 0.09 (C(4)F(9)CHO), 0.74 +/- 0.08 (CF(3)CH(2)CHO), and 0.55 +/- 0.09 (C(6)F(13)CH(2)CHO). Quantum yields at 308 nm were 0.17 +/- 0.03 (CF(3)CHO), 0.08 +/- 0.02 (C(4)F(9)CHO), and 0.04 +/- 0.01 (CF(3)CH(2)CHO). The quantum yields decrease with increasing size of the C(x)F(2)(x)(+1) group and with increasing wavelength of the photolysis light. The photolysis quantum yield at 308 nm for CF(3)CHO measured here is a factor of at least 8 greater than that reported previously. Photolysis is probably the dominant atmospheric fate of C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)CHO (x = 1-4) and is an important fate of C(x)F(2)(x)(+1)CH(2)CHO (x = 1 and 6). These results have important ramifications concerning the yield of perfluorocarboxylic acids in the atmospheric oxidation of fluorotelomer alcohols.
- Published
- 2006
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21. Atmospheric chemistry of propionaldehyde: kinetics and mechanisms of reactions with OH radicals and Cl atoms, UV spectrum, and self-reaction kinetics of CH3CH2C(O)O2 radicals at 298 K.
- Author
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Le Crâne JP, Villenave E, Hurley MD, Wallington TJ, and Ball JC
- Abstract
The kinetics and mechanism of the reactions of Cl atoms and OH radicals with CH3CH2CHO were investigated at room temperature using two complementary techniques: flash photolysis/UV absorption and continuous photolysis/FTIR smog chamber. Reaction with Cl atoms proceeds predominantly by abstraction of the aldehydic hydrogen atom to form acyl radicals. FTIR measurements indicated that the acyl forming channel accounts for (88 +/- 5)%, while UV measurements indicated that the acyl forming channel accounts for (88 +/- 3)%. Relative rate methods were used to measure: k(Cl + CH3CH2CHO) = (1.20 +/- 0.23) x 10(-10); k(OH + CH3CH2CHO) = (1.82 +/- 0.23) x 10(-11); and k(Cl + CH3CH2C(O)Cl) = (1.64 +/- 0.22) x 10(-12) cm3 molecule(-1) s(-1). The UV spectrum of CH3CH2C(O)O2, rate constant for self-reaction, and rate constant for cross-reaction with CH3CH2O2 were determined: sigma(207 nm) = (6.71 +/- 0.19) x 10(-18) cm2 molecule(-1), k(CH3CH2C(O)O2 + CH3CH2C(O)O2) = (1.68 +/- 0.08) x 10(-11), and k(CH3CH2C(O)O2 + CH3CH2O2) = (1.20 +/- 0.06) x 10(-11) cm3 molecule(-1) s(-1), where quoted uncertainties only represent 2sigma statistical errors. The infrared spectrum of C2H5C(O)O2NO2 was recorded, and products of the Cl-initiated oxidation of CH3CH2CHO in the presence of O2 with, and without, NO(x) were identified. Results are discussed with respect to the atmospheric chemistry of propionaldehyde.
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- 2005
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22. Atmospheric chemistry of CF3CH2CH2OH: kinetics, mechanisms and products of Cl atom and OH radical initiated oxidation in the presence and absence of NOX.
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Hurley MD, Misner JA, Ball JC, Wallington TJ, Ellis DA, Martin JW, Mabury SA, and Sulbaek Andersen MP
- Abstract
Relative rate techniques were used to study the kinetics of the reactions of Cl atoms and OH radicals with CF(3)CH(2)C(O)H and CF(3)CH(2)CH(2)OH in 700 Torr of N(2) or air diluent at 296 +/- 2 K. The rate constants determined were k(Cl+CF(3)CH(2)C(O)H) = (1.81 +/- 0.27) x 10(-11), k(OH+CF(3)CH(2)C(O)H) = (2.57 +/- 0.44) x 10(-12), k(Cl+CF(3)CH(2)CH(2)OH) = (1.59 +/- 0.20) x 10(-11), and k(OH+CF(3)CH(2)CH(2)OH) = (6.91 +/- 0.91) x 10(-13) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1). Product studies of the chlorine initiated oxidation of CF(3)CH(2)CH(2)OH in the absence of NO show the sole primary product to be CF(3)CH(2)C(O)H. Product studies of the chlorine initiated oxidation of CF(3)CH(2)CH(2)OH in the presence of NO show the primary products to be CF(3)CH(2)C(O)H (81%), HC(O)OH (10%), and CF(3)C(O)H. Product studies of the chlorine initiated oxidation of CF(3)CH(2)C(O)H in the absence of NO show the primary products to be CF(3)C(O)H (76%), CF(3)CH(2)C(O)OH (14%), and CF(3)CH(2)C(O)OOH (< or =10%). As part of this work, an upper limit of k(O(3)+CF(3)CH(2)CH(2)OH) < 2 x 10(-21) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) was established. Results are discussed with respect to the atmospheric chemistry of fluorinated alcohols.
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- 2005
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23. Semiconductor nanocrystal conjugates, FISH and pH.
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Xiao Y, Telford WG, Ball JC, Locascio LE, and Barker PE
- Subjects
- Biotinylation, Crystallization, DNA Probes chemistry, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Semiconductors, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence methods, Quantum Dots
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH): products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx.
- Author
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Sulbaek Andersen MP, Nielsen OJ, Hurley MD, Ball JC, Wallington TJ, Ellis DA, Martin JW, and Mabury SA
- Abstract
Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the Cl atom initiated oxidation of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (C(4)F(9)CH(2)CH(2)OH, 4:2 FTOH) in the presence of NO(x) in 700 Torr of N(2)/O(2) diluent at 296 K. Chemical activation effects play an important role in the atmospheric chemistry of the peroxy, and possibly the alkoxy, radicals derived from 4:2 FTOH. Cl atoms react with C(4)F(9)CH(2)CH(2)OH to give C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(*)HOH radicals which add O(2) to give chemically activated alpha-hydroxyperoxy radicals, [C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(OO(*))HOH]*. In 700 Torr of N(2)/O(2) at 296 K, approximately 50% of the [C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(OO(*))HOH]* radicals decompose "promptly" to give HO(2) radicals and C(4)F(9)CH(2)CHO, the remaining [C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(OO(*))HOH]* radicals undergo collisional deactivation to give thermalized peroxy radicals, C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(OO(*))HOH. Decomposition to HO(2) and C(4)F(9)CH(2)CHO is the dominant atmospheric fate of the thermalized peroxy radicals. In the presence of excess NO, the thermalized peroxy radicals react to give C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(O(*))HOH radicals which then decompose at a rate >2.5 x 10(6) s(-1) to give HC(O)OH and the alkyl radical C(4)F(9)CH(2)(*). The primary products of 4:2 FTOH oxidation in the presence of excess NO(x) are C(4)F(9)CH(2)CHO, C(4)F(9)CHO, and HCOOH. Secondary products include C(4)F(9)CH(2)C(O)O(2)NO(2), C(4)F(9)C(O)O(2)NO(2), and COF(2). In contrast to experiments conducted in the absence of NO(x), there was no evidence (<2% yield) for the formation of the perfluorinated acid C(4)F(9)C(O)OH. The results are discussed with regard to the atmospheric chemistry of fluorotelomer alcohols.
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- 2005
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25. Covalent immobilization of beta-galactosidase onto a gold-coated magnetoelastic transducer via a self-assembled monolayer: toward a magnetoelastic biosensor.
- Author
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Ball JC, Puckett LG, and Bachas LG
- Subjects
- Biosensing Techniques instrumentation, Molecular Structure, Time Factors, Transducers, Biosensing Techniques methods, Enzymes, Immobilized, Gold chemistry, Magnetics instrumentation, Membranes, Artificial, beta-Galactosidase chemistry
- Abstract
The enzyme beta-galactosidase has been covalently immobilized onto a gold-coated magnetoelastic film via a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of omega-carboxylic acid alkylthiol. Use of magnetoelastic transduction allows for the wireless monitoring of enzymatic activity through the associated change in the frequency and amplitude of magnetic fields. The formations of SAMs of 3-mercaptopropanoic acid and thioctic acid were monitored by magnetoelastic transduction. After coupling of beta-galactosidase to the SAMs, the enzyme activity was monitored by using a substrate that forms an insoluble product upon action of the enzyme. Specifically, an indolyl galactopyranoside substrate was employed in conjunction with an azo dye as the precipitating system. The immobilized enzyme was evaluated and found to have an apparent Michaelis-Menten constant (KM) of 1.2 mM for the indolyl galactopyranoside. Calibration plots for both substrates and inhibitors were generated to establish the versatility of this sensing system. Kinetic parameters for nonprecipitating substrates were determined in conjunction with a precipitating enzymatic substrate by way of a competitive inhibition study using beta-galactosidase attached to magnetoelastic strips. The methods developed within this work allow for the fabrication of wireless enzyme sensing systems, which can also be used as another means of screening for enzyme inhibitors.
- Published
- 2003
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26. Particle characteristics responsible for effects on human lung epithelial cells.
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Aust AE, Ball JC, Hu AA, Lighty JS, Smith KR, Straccia AM, Veranth JM, and Young WC
- Subjects
- Biological Availability, Cells, Cultured, Humans, Lung metabolism, Oxidation-Reduction, Oxidative Stress, Air Pollutants chemistry, Epithelial Cells drug effects, Lung drug effects, Metals chemistry
- Abstract
Some recent epidemiologic investigations have shown an association between increased incidence of respiratory symptoms and exposure to low levels of particulate matter (PM*) less than 10 microm or less than 2.5 microm in aerodynamic diameter (PM10 and PM2.5, respectively). If particulates are causally involved with respiratory symptoms, it is important to understand which components may be responsible. However, increasing evidence suggests that transition metals present in particles, especially iron, generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) that may be involved in producing some of the observed respiratory symptoms. The hypothesis for this study is twofold: bioavailable transition metals from inhaled airborne particulates catalyze redox reactions in human lung epithelial cells, leading to oxidative stress and increased production of mediators of pulmonary inflammation: and the size, transition metal content, and mineral speciation of particulates affect their ability to cause these effects. This work focused on the relation between physical characteristics of particles (eg, size, bioavailable transition metal content, and mineral speciation) and their ability to generate hydroxyl radicals in cell-free systems and to cause oxidative stress, which results in the synthesis of mediators of pulmonary inflammation in cultured human lung epithelial cells. These relations were studied by comparing size-fractionated, chemically characterized coal fly ash (CFA) produced by combustion of three different coals to obtain milligram quantities of ash. One transition metal, iron, was studied specifically because it is by far the predominant transition metal in CFA. In addition, smaller quantities of particles from gasoline engines, diesel engines, and ambient air were studied. Phosphate buffer soluble fractions from particles from all sources were capable of generating ROS, as measured by production of malondialdehyde (MDA) from 2-deoxyribose. This activity was inhibited over 90% for all particles by the metal chelator N-[5-[3-[(5-aminopentyl)hydroxycarbamoyl]propionamidol-pentyl]-3-[[5-(N-hydroxyacetamido)pentyl]carbamoyl]propionohydroxamic acid (desferrioxamine B, or DF), strongly suggesting that transition metal(s), probably iron, were responsible. Particles from coal or gasoline combustion had greater ability to produce ROS than particles from diesel combustion. Iron was mobilized by citrate (at pH 7.5) from particles of all sources tested; gasoline combustion particles were the only particles not analyzed for iron mobilization because there were not enough particles for the iron mobilization assay. CFA particles were size-fractioned; the amount of iron mobilized by citrate was inversely related to the size of particles and also depended on the source of coal. Iron from the CFA particles was responsible for inducing the iron-storage protein ferritin in cultured human lung epithelial cells (A549 cells). The amount of iron mobilized by citrate was directly proportional to the amount of ferritin induced in the A549 cells. Iron from the CFA was also responsible for inducing the inflammatory mediator interleukin (IL) 8 in A549 cells. Iron existed in several species in the fly ash, but the bioavailable iron was associated with the glassy aluminosilicate fraction, which caused ferritin and IL-8 to be induced in the A549 cells. In crustal dust, another component of urban particulates, iron was associated with oxides and clay but not with aluminosilicates. The crustal dust contained almost no iron that could be mobilized by citrate. Iron could be mobilized from diesel combustion particulates, but at a much lower level than for all other combustion particles. Samples of ambient PM2.5 collected in Salt Lake City over 5-day periods during one month varied widely in the amount of iron that could be mobilized. If bioavailable transition metals (eg, iron) are related to the specific biological responses outlined here, then the potential exists to develop in vitro assays to determine whether particulates of unknown composition and origin can cause effects similar to those observed in this study.
- Published
- 2002
27. Characterization of electrochemically deposited polypyrrole using magnetoelastic material transduction elements.
- Author
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Ersöz A, Ball JC, Grimes CA, and Bachas LG
- Subjects
- Alloys, Elasticity, Electrodes, Equipment Design, Gold, Materials Testing, Polymers analysis, Pyrroles analysis, Elastomers, Electrochemistry instrumentation, Environmental Monitoring instrumentation, Magnetics, Polymers chemistry, Pyrroles chemistry
- Abstract
Magnetoelastic alloy films have been used as a working electrode in an electrochemical cell. This material allows magnetic interrogation of electrochemical deposition. This technique was used to monitor the electrochemical deposition of polypyrrole by multisweep (CV) and potentiostatic methods. Since the determination of the mass-sensitive magnetoelastic film's resonance frequency is based on magnetic transduction, an inherent advantage of this method is that it requires no electrical connections other than the working lead of the potentiostat. Increases in pyrrole deposition correlated with a decrease in the peak resonance frequency of the magnetoelastic alloy. This technique provides a novel approach by which one can monitor electrochemical processes.
- Published
- 2002
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28. The formation of reactive oxygen species catalyzed by neutral, aqueous extracts of NIST ambient particulate matter and diesel engine particles.
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Ball JC, Straccia AM, Young WC, and Aust AE
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants, Occupational toxicity, Catalysis, Malondialdehyde analysis, Mass Spectrometry, Vehicle Emissions toxicity, Air Pollutants, Occupational chemistry, Reactive Oxygen Species, Vehicle Emissions analysis
- Abstract
It is important to characterize the chemical properties of particulate matter in order to understand how low doses, inhaled by a susceptible population, might cause human health effects. The formation of reactive oxygen species catalyzed by neutral, aqueous extracts of two ambient particulate samples, National Institute of Standards & Technology (NIST) Standard Reference Materials (SRM) 1648 and 1649, and two diesel particulate samples, NIST SRM 1650 and SRM 2975, were measured. The formation of reactive oxygen species was estimated by measuring the formation of malondialdehyde from 2-deoxyribose in the presence of ascorbic acid; H2O2 was not added to this assay. SRM 1649, ambient particulate matter collected from Washington, DC, generated the most malondialdehyde, while SRM 2975, diesel particulate matter collected from a forklift, yielded the least amount. Desferrioxamine inhibited the formation of malondialdehyde from the particulate samples providing additional data to support the observation that transition metals were involved in the generation of reactive oxygen species. Six transition metal sulfates (iron sulfate, copper sulfate, vanadyl sulfate, cobalt sulfate, nickel sulfate, and zinc sulfate) were assayed for their ability to generate reactive oxygen species under the same conditions used for the particulate samples in order to facilitate comparisons between particles and these transition metals. The concentration of transition metals was measured in aqueous extracts of these particulate samples using ion-coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis. There was qualitative agreement between the concentrations of Fe, Cu, and V and the amount of malondialdehyde produced from extracts of these particulate samples. These data suggest that transition metals can be dissolved from particles in neutral, aqueous solutions and that these metals are capable of catalyzing the formation of reactive oxygen species.
- Published
- 2000
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29. Electrochemistry in nanovials fabricated by combining screen printing and laser micromachining
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Ball JC, Scott DL, Lumpp JK, Daunert S, Wang J, and Bachas LG
- Abstract
The coupling of screen-printing and laser micromachining technology has been used to create a nanovial with "built-in" working and reference electrodes. The volume of the nanovial was calculated to be 7.2 nL using dimensions determined by SEM. The electrochemical nanovial was characterized using the ferri/ferrocyanide redox couple. Cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry experiments were performed with electrochemical nanovials utilizing 5% (v/v) glycerin in the solutions and a humidified headspace to control evaporation of the small-volume samples. Chronoamperometry experiments gave results consistent with a diffusion-limited process and revealed a working electrode surface area of 2.6 x 10(4) micron 2. The ultrasmall-volume cells represent a simple, reliable, low-cost approach for the fabrication of complete electrochemical nanovials.
- Published
- 2000
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30. Sonoelectrochemical and sonochemical effects of cavitation: correlation with interfacial cavitation induced by 20 kHz ultrasound.
- Author
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Hardcastle JL, Ball JC, Hong Q, Marken F, Compton RG, Bull SD, and Davies SG
- Abstract
Sonoelectrochemical measurements at macro-electrodes under extreme conditions with a very short distance between ultrasonic horn tip and electrode and different ultrasound intensity levels are shown to result in violent cavitation detected in form of current peaks superimposed on the average limiting current. Analysis of the current data obtained for the oxidation of ferrocene in dimethylformamide (0.1 M NBu4PF6) at a 4 mm diameter Pt disc electrode and for the reduction of Ru(NH3)6(3+) in aqueous 0.1 M KCl at a 6 mm diameter Pt disc electrode consistently indicate a change of the physicochemical nature of sonoelectrochemical processes under extreme conditions. The sonoelectrochemical measurement of the rate constant for the carbon bromide bond cleavage of a 3-bromobenzophenone radical anion electrogenerated at a glassy carbon electrode in dimethylformamide solution in the presence of power ultrasound is shown to yield evidence for a breakdown of the conventional mass transport model of a planar diffusion layer under extreme conditions. The change can be correlated to the number of current data points deviating more than 10% from the mean of the current due to violent cavitation processes superimposed onto the average limiting current. Further, a study of the sonochemical destruction of aqueous dilute cyanide solution (in 0.1 M NaOH) demonstrates a correlation between the electrochemically detected cavitation violence and the sonochemical activity. Factors that govern the violence of interfacial cavitation appear to be directly proportional to the factors that make cavitation in the bulk solution chemically efficient.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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31. Abstracts of the 6th FECS Conference 1998 Lectures.
- Author
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Rowland FS, Blake DR, Larsen BR, Lindskog A, Peterson PJ, Williams WP, Wallington TJ, Pilling MJ, Carslaw N, Creasey DJ, Heard DE, Jacobs P, Lee J, Lewis AC, McQuaid JB, Stockwell WR, Frank H, Sacco P, Cocheo V, Lynge E, Andersen A, Nilsson R, Barlow L, Pukkala E, Nordlinder R, Boffetta P, Grandjean P, Heikkil P, Hürte LG, Jakobsson R, Lundberg I, Moen B, Partanen T, Riise T, Borowiak A, De Saeger E, Schnitzler KG, Gravenhorst G, Jacobi HW, Moelders S, Lammel G, Busch G, Beese FO, Dentener FJ, Feichter J, Fraedrich K, Roelofs GJ, Friedrich R, Reis S, Voehringer F, Simpson D, Moussiopoulos N, Sahm P, Tourlou PM, Salmons R, Papameletiou D, Maqueda JM, Suhr PB, Bell W, Paton-Walsh C, Woods PT, Partridge RH, Slemr J, Slemr F, Schmidbauer N, Ravishankara AR, Jenkin ME, de Leeuw G, van Eijk AM, Flossmann AI, Wobrock W, Mestayer PG, Tranchant B, Ljungström E, Karlsson R, Larsen SE, Roemer M, Builtjes PJ, Koffi B, Koffi EN, De Saeger E, Ro-Poulsen H, Mikkelsen TN, Hummelshøj P, Hovmand MF, Simoneit BR, van der Meulen A, Meyer MB, Berndt T, Böge O, Stratmann F, Cass GR, Harrison RM, Shi JP, Hoffmann T, Warscheid B, Bandur R, Marggraf U, Nigge W, Kamens R, Jang M, Strommen M, Chien CJ, Leach K, Ammann M, Kalberer M, Arens F, Lavanchy V, Gâggeler HW, Baltensperger U, Davies JA, Cox RA, Alonso SG, Pastor RP, Argüello GA, Willner H, Berndt T, Böge O, Bogillo VI, Pokrovskiy VA, Kuraev OV, Gozhyk PF, Bolzacchini E, Bruschi M, Fantucci P, Meinardi S, Orlandi M, Rindone B, Bolzacchini E, Bohn B, Rindone B, Bruschi M, Zetzsch C, Brussol C, Duane M, Larsen B, Carlier P, Kotzias D, Caracena AB, Aznar AM, Ferradás EG, Christensen CS, Skov H, Hummelshøj P, Jensen NO, Lohse C, Cocheo V, Sacco P, Chatzis C, Cocheo V, Sacco P, Boaretto C, Quaglio F, Zaratin L, Pagani D, Cocheo L, Cocheo V, Asnar AM, Baldan A, Ballesta PP, Boaretto C, Caracena AB, Ferradas EG, Gonzalez-Flesca N, Goelen E, Hansen AB, Sacco P, De Saeger E, Skov H, Consonni V, Gramatica P, Santagostino A, Galvani P, Bolzacchini E, Consonni V, Gramatica P, Todeschini R, Dippel G, Reinhardt H, Zellner R, Dämmer K, Bednarek G, Breil M, Zellner R, Febo A, Allegrini I, Giliberti C, Perrino C, Fogg PG, Geiger H, Barnes I, Becker KH, Maurer T, Geyskens F, Bormans R, Lambrechts M, Goelen E, Giese M, Frank H, Glasius M, Hornung P, Jacobsen JK, Klausen HS, Klitgaard KC, Møller CK, Petersen AP, Petersen LS, Wessel S, Hansen TS, Lohse C, Boaretto E, Heinemeier J, Glasius M, Di Bella D, Lahaniati M, Calogirou A, Jensen NR, Hjorth J, Kotzias D, Larsen BR, Gonzalez-Flesca N, Cicolella A, Bates M, Bastin E, Gurbanov MA, Akhmedly KM, Balayev VS, Haselmann KF, Ketola R, Laturnus F, Lauritsen FR, Grøn C, Herrmann H, Ervens B, Reese A, Umschlag T, Wicktor F, Zellner R, Herrmann H, Umschlag T, Müller K, Bolzacchini E, Meinardi S, Rindone B, Jenkin ME, Hayman GD, Jensen NO, Courtney M, Hummelshøj P, Christensen CS, Larsen BR, Johnson MS, Hegelund F, Nelander B, Kirchner F, Klotz B, Barnes I, Sørensen S, Becker KH, Etzkorn T, Platt U, Wirtz K, Martín-Reviejo M, Laturnus F, Martinez E, Cabañas B, Aranda A, Martín P, Salgado S, Rodriguez D, Masclet P, Jaffrezo JL, Hillamo R, Mellouki A, Le Calvé S, Le Bras G, Moriarty J, O'Donnell S, Wenger J, Sidebottom H, Mingarrol MT, Cosin S, Pastor RP, Alonso SG, Sanz MJ, Bravo I, Gonzalez D, Pérez MA, Mustafaev I, Mammadova S, Noda J, Hallquist M, Langer S, Ljungström E, Nohara K, Kutsuna S, Ibusuki T, Oehme M, Kölliker S, Brombacher S, Merz L, Pastor RP, Alonso SG, Cabezas AQ, Peeters J, Vereecken L, El Yazal J, Pfeffer HU, Breuer L, Platz J, Nielsen OJ, Sehested J, Wallington TJ, Ball JC, Hurley MD, Straccia AM, Schneider WF, Pérez-Casany MP, Nebot-Gil I, Sánchez-Marín J, Putz E, Folberth G, Pfister G, Weissflog L, Elansky NP, Sørensen S, Barnes I, Becker KH, Shao M, Heiden AC, Kley D, Rockel P, Wildt J, Silva GV, Vasconcelos MT, Fernandes EO, Santos AM, Skov H, Hansen A, Løfstrøm P, Lorenzen G, Stabel JR, Wolkoff P, Pedersen T, Strom AB, Skov H, Hertel O, Jensen FP, Hjorth J, Galle B, Wallin S, Theloke J, Libuda HG, Zabel F, Touaty M, Bonsang B, Ullerstam M, Langer S, Ljungström E, Wenger J, Bonard A, Manning M, Nolan S, O'Sullivan N, Sidebottom H, Wenger J, Collins E, Moriarty J, O'Donnell S, Sidebottom H, Wenger J, Collins E, Moriarty J, O'Donnell S, Sidebottom H, Wenger J, Sidebottom H, Chadwick P, O'Leary B, Treacy J, Wolkoff P, Clausen PA, Wilkins CK, Hougaard KS, Nielsen GD, Zilinskis V, Jansons G, Peksens A, Lazdins A, Arinci YV, Erdöl N, Ekinci E, Okutan H, Manlafalioglu I, Bakeas EB, Siskos PA, Viras LG, Smirnioudi VN, Bottenheim JW, Biesenthal T, Gong W, Makar P, Delmas V, Menard T, Tatry V, Moussafir J, Thomas D, Coppalle A, Ellermann T, Hertel O, Skov H, Frohn L, Manscher OH, Friis J, Girgzdiene R, Girgzdys A, Gurevich NA, Gårdfeldt K, Langer S, Hermans C, Vandaele AC, Carleer M, Fally S, Colin R, Bernath PF, Jenouvrier A, Coquart B, Mérienne MF, Hertel O, Frohn L, Skov H, Ellermann T, Huntrieser H, Schlager H, Feigl C, Kemp K, Palmgren F, Kiilsholm S, Rasmussen A, Sørensen JH, Klemm O, Lange H, Larsen RW, Larsen NW, Nicolaisen F, Sørensen GO, Beukes JA, Larsen PB, Jensen SS, Fenger J, de Leeuw G, Kunz G, Cohen L, Schlünzen H, Muller F, Schulz M, Tamm S, Geernaert G, Hertel O, Pedersen B, Geernaert LL, Lund S, Vignati E, Jickells T, Spokes L, Matei C, Jinga OA, Jinga DC, Moliner R, Braekman-Danheux C, Fontana A, Suelves I, Thieman T, Vassilev S, Skov H, Hertel O, Zlatev Z, Brandt J, Bastrup-Birk A, Ellermann T, Frohn L, Vandaele AC, Hermans C, Carleer M, Tsouli A, Colin R, Windsperger AM, Turi K, Dworak O, Zellweger C, Weingartner E, Rüttimann R, Hofer P, Baltensperger U, Ziv A, Iakovleva E, Palmgren F, Berkovicz R, Skov H, Alastuey A, Querol X, Chaves A, Lopez-Soler A, Ruiz C, Andrees JM, Allegrini I, Febo A, Giusto M, Angeloni M, Di Filippo P, D'Innocenzio F, Lepore L, Marconi A, Arshinov MY, Belan BD, Davydov DK, Kovaleskii VK, Plotinov AP, Pokrovskii EV, Sklyadneva TK, Tolmachev GN, Arshinov MY, Belan BD, Sklyadneva TK, Behnke W, Elend M, Krüger U, Zetzsch C, Belan BD, Arshinov MY, Davydov DK, Kovalevskii VK, Plotnikov AP, Pokrovskii EV, Rasskazchikova TM, Sklyadneva TK, Tolmachev GN, Belan BD, Arshinov MY, Simonenkov DV, Tolmachev GN, Bilde M, Aker PM, Börensen C, Kirchner U, Scheer V, Vogt R, Ellermann T, Geernaert LL, Pryor SC, Barthelmie RJ, Feilberg A, Nielsen T, Kamens RM, Freitas MC, Marques AP, Reis MA, Alves LC, Ilyinskikh NN, Ilyinskikh IN, Ilyinskikh EN, Johansen K, Stavnsbjerg P, Gabrielsson P, Bak F, Andersen E, Autrup H, Kamens R, Jang M, Strommen M, Leach K, Kirchner U, Scheer V, Börensen C, Vogt R, Igor K, Svjatoslav G, Anatoliy B, Komov IL, Istchenko AA, Lourenço MG, Mactavish D, Sirois A, Masclet P, Jaffrezo JL, van der Meulen A, Milukaite A, Morkunas V, Jurgutis P, Mikelinskiene A, Nielsen T, Feilberg A, Binderup ML, Pineda M, Palacios JM, Garcia E, Cilleruelo C, Moliner R, Popovitcheva OB, Trukhin ME, Persiantseva NM, Buriko Y, Starik AM, Demirdjian B, Suzanne J, Probst TU, Rietz B, Alfassi ZB, Pokrovskiy VA, Zenobi R, Bogatyr'ov VM, Gun'ko VM, Querol X, Alastuey A, Lopez-Soler A, Mantilla E, Plana F, Artiño B, Rauterberg-Wulff A, Israël GW, Rocha TA, Duarte AC, Röhrl A, Lammel G, Spindler G, Müller K, Herrmann H, Strommen MR, Vignati E, de Leeuw G, and Berkowicz R
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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32. A Dutch addict's view of methadone maintenance--an American and a Dutch appraisal.
- Author
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Ball JC and van de Wijngaart GF
- Subjects
- Adult, Cocaine, Heroin Dependence psychology, Humans, Male, Netherlands, Program Evaluation, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Treatment Outcome, United States, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Heroin Dependence rehabilitation, Methadone therapeutic use
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Why has it proved so difficult to match drug abuse patients to appropriate treatment?
- Author
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Ball JC
- Subjects
- Combined Modality Therapy, Humans, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Illicit Drugs, Patient Care Team, Psychotropic Drugs, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
Why has it proved so difficult to match drug abuse patients to appropriate treatment? In seeking answers to this dilemma, attention is directed to the conceptual, semantic, substantive, methodological, political and cultural issues which need to be resolved. In particular, the lack of knowledge about the treatment domain as well as the corresponding dearth of instruments to measure program characteristics and the delivery of treatment services is noted. Although the importance of demographic and cultural determinants of both patient and treatment characteristics seems evident, numerous conceptual issues persist. Is matching patients to treatment and rehabilitation a one-time event or a process? Is matching a simplistic concept? It is suggested that the principal questions to be resolved about matching drug abuse patients to treatment and rehabilitation are conceptual, or theoretical.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Formation of trifluoroacetic acid from the atmospheric degradation of hydrofluorocarbon 134a: a human health concern?
- Author
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Ball JC and Wallington TJ
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants toxicity, Humans, Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated toxicity, Trifluoroacetic Acid toxicity, Air Pollutants analysis, Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated chemistry, Trifluoroacetic Acid chemistry
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Detection of oxidative mutagens in an urban air-particulate extract: a preliminary study.
- Author
-
Hoyer ME, Keeler GJ, and Ball JC
- Subjects
- DNA, Bacterial drug effects, Mutagens toxicity, Pilot Projects, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Air Pollutants toxicity, Methylene Chloride toxicity, Mutagenicity Tests, Oxidants toxicity, Salmonella typhimurium genetics
- Abstract
The Ames assays strains TA98 and TA100 have been useful in characterizing complex mixtures from organic solvent extracts of particles from diesel-powered vehicles, ambient air, and other sources. In this paper we report preliminary experiments using TA102, a bacterial strain that detects compounds that can oxidize DNA, to characterize the mutagenicity of an ambient air sample collected in Ann Arbor, MI. Four sets of ambient air filters were collected in duplicate over a period of several days. The mutagenicities of methylene chloride extracts of these filters were compared using strains TA98, TA100 and TA102. The concentration-mutagenicity data for TA98 and TA100 were linear over the concentration range 0-200 micrograms extract/plate. The mutagenicity of the extracts using TA102 was much lower than the other two strains and was non-linear over the concentration range tested. These results suggest that it would be difficult to use TA102 to identify the oxidative mutagens present in an ambient air particulate extract.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Solvent extraction efficiencies of mutagenic components from diesel particles.
- Author
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Montreuil CN, Ball JC, Gorse RA Jr, and Young WC
- Subjects
- Acetone chemistry, Acetonitriles chemistry, Methanol chemistry, Methylene Chloride chemistry, Mutagens chemistry, Solubility, Solvents, Mutagens isolation & purification, Vehicle Emissions analysis
- Abstract
In order to determine the efficiency of organic solvent extractions of fresh diesel-engine exhaust particles a series of Soxhlet extractions were set up using single and sequential extractions of fresh diesel particles with solvents of increasing polarities. Single extractions were carried out with methylene chloride, methanol, acetone and acetonitrile. A single filter was sequentially extracted with methylene chloride followed by methanol, acetone and acetonitrile. Methylene chloride extracted the most mutagenicity relative to the other three solvents. In addition, methylene chloride extracted 97% of the total extracted mutagenicity from a sequential series of extractions. Therefore, we conclude that of the solvents tested methylene chloride extracts the highest proportion of mutagens from fresh diesel exhaust and little mutagenicity is lost using methylene chloride as the only extraction solvent.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Recovery of Ames assay mutagenicity of a polar fraction of a diesel engine particulate extract from capillary gas chromatography.
- Author
-
Richert JF, Jensen TE, Young WC, and Ball JC
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, Gas, Fuel Oils toxicity, In Vitro Techniques, Mutagenicity Tests, Rats, Mutagens toxicity, Vehicle Emissions toxicity
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Followup study of possible HIV seropositivity among abusers of parenteral drugs in 1971-72.
- Author
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Lange WR, Ball JC, Adler WH, Brown E, Pyle R, Hoffman W, and Dax EM
- Subjects
- Blotting, Western, Cross Reactions, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, False Positive Reactions, Female, Follow-Up Studies, HIV Seropositivity blood, HIV Seropositivity immunology, Humans, Kentucky epidemiology, Male, Mortality, Population Surveillance, T-Lymphocyte Subsets chemistry, HIV Seropositivity epidemiology, Substance Abuse, Intravenous complications
- Abstract
Serum specimens obtained from a nationwide sample of parenteral drug abusers (PDAs) during the period 1971-72 had previously been screened for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibodies. Some specimens were considered to be positive to both ELISA and Western blot (WB) analysis. These findings have been a topic of controversy, since HIV was not thought to have penetrated at-risk populations at such an early date. This study was a followup of those PDAs with apparent seropositivity to WB analysis. Of 10 persons followed, only one death (in 1985) was documented, and postmortem findings were inconsistent with HIV infection. Eight of the remaining PDAs were traced and found to be alive and well in 1989. Fresh specimens were obtained from the two persons with the strongest 1971-72 WB staining and were found to be both ELISA and WB negative on retesting. Their T-cell parameters were within normal limits. We concluded that the earlier WB results were most likely false positives and that definitive evidence of HIV infection in the U.S. addict population as early as 1971-72 is still lacking.
- Published
- 1991
39. Ames assay mutagenicity and electronic structure calculations of bromomethylfluoranthenes, chloromethylfluoranthenes, and hydroxymethylfluoranthenes.
- Author
-
Ball JC and Young WC
- Subjects
- Acetone, Dimethyl Sulfoxide, Fluorenes chemistry, Hydrocarbons, Brominated chemistry, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated chemistry, Methanol chemistry, Methanol toxicity, Molecular Structure, Solvents, Thermodynamics, Fluorenes toxicity, Hydrocarbons, Brominated toxicity, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated toxicity, Methanol analogs & derivatives, Mutagenicity Tests
- Abstract
The mutagenicities of the five possible isomers of bromomethylfluoranthene, chloromethylfluoranthene, and hydroxymethylfluoranthene were determined in the Ames assay using strains TA100 and TA98 without the addition of rat-liver S9 tissue extract. The mutagenicities of the bromomethyl and chloromethylfluoranthenes ranged from 25 to 6000 rev./nmol. The most mutagenic compound was 8-chloromethylfluoranthene in strain TA98 (6000 rev./nmol). The reactivities of the bromomethylfluoranthenes and the chloromethylfluoranthenes were estimated from electronic structure calculations using the MNDO and the PM3 semi-empirical methods. The bromomethylfluoranthenes showed the smallest differences between the heats of formation of the carbocations and the heats of formation of the parent bromomethyl derivatives. Therefore, the bromomethylfluoranthenes were estimated to be the most reactive of the halomethylfluoranthenes studied. The compound that showed the largest change in heat of formation (the most stable halomethylfluoranthene) going from the halomethylfluoranthene to the carbocation was 2-chloromethylfluoranthene. However, neither the most reactive nor the most stable halomethylfluoranthenes were the most mutagenic in either strain of bacteria. These results are interpreted to suggest that the reactivity of the parent halomethylfluoranthene is not a critical factor in the mechanism by which these compounds are mutagenic, but some other factor, perhaps intercalation, must be a critical step in the mechanism of mutagenesis of these compounds.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A treatment crisis: cocaine use by clients in methadone maintenance programs.
- Author
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Kolar AF, Brown BS, Weddington WW, and Ball JC
- Subjects
- Baltimore, Clinical Protocols, Counseling, Heroin Dependence complications, Hospitalization, Humans, Patient Discharge, Prevalence, Substance-Related Disorders complications, Substance-Related Disorders therapy, Cocaine, Heroin Dependence rehabilitation, Methadone therapeutic use, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
We surveyed 11 methadone maintenance treatment programs in the Baltimore, Maryland, area to examine cocaine use among their 2414 clients and the methods employed to cope with that use. The percent of clients with at least one urine sample positive for cocaine during the month previous to study was 15.7% (379/2414) and ranged from 5.9% to 33.0% among the 11 programs. We determined the programs' use of monitoring strategies, treatment services, and administrative controls. We discuss the policy implications of our findings for methadone maintenance programs' efforts to address cocaine use with particular regard to the epidemic of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) among intravenous drug users, their sexual partners, and offspring.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Opening the "black box" of drug abuse treatment-measurement and evaluation of the treatment domain.
- Author
-
Ball JC
- Subjects
- Humans, Methadone therapeutic use, Opioid-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation
- Published
- 1990
42. The heroin addicts' view of methadone maintenance.
- Author
-
Ball JC, Graff H, and Sheehan JJ Jr
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Attitude of Health Personnel, Counseling, Female, Goals, Heroin Dependence complications, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders complications, Pennsylvania, Sex Factors, Attitude, Heroin Dependence therapy, Methadone therapeutic use
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Pretreatment source of income and response to methadone maintenance: a follow-up study.
- Author
-
McLellan AT, Ball JC, Rosen L, and O'Brien CP
- Subjects
- Adult, Crime, Family, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Pennsylvania, Employment, Methadone therapeutic use, Opioid-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Public Assistance
- Abstract
The authors assessed the relationship between source of pretreatment income and response to treatment at 6-month follow-up in 165 male veterans admitted to a methadone maintenance treatment program. Subjects were grouped according to whether the majority of their pretreatment income was based on job earnings, public assistance, or criminal activity. Significant improvements in drug use, legal status, and psychological functioning were found in the employed group. The group supported by criminal activity showed the most significant and pervasive improvements, especially in the areas of drug use and family, legal, and employment problems. The group receiving public assistance showed no significant improvements on any of the 16 criterion measures, including drug use.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A comparison by race/ethnicity of narcotic addict crime rates in Baltimore, New York, and Philadelphia.
- Author
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Nurco DN, Ball JC, Shaffer JW, Kinlock TW, and Langrod J
- Subjects
- Adult, Heroin Dependence psychology, Humans, Male, Opioid-Related Disorders rehabilitation, United States, Violence, Crime, Ethnicity psychology, Opioid-Related Disorders psychology, Urban Population
- Abstract
In an effort to provide timely information concerning the criminal activities of narcotic addicts in three different metropolitan areas, male narcotic addicts attending methadone maintenance/detoxification centers in Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York City participated in extensive, confidential interviews conducted between May 1983 and April 1984. The information obtained focused on the amounts and types of crimes committed during the addict's longest period of active addiction to opiates, their derivatives and synthetics, as well as his first period of nonaddiction. Crimes committed were placed in one of five categories as follows: Theft, Violence, Drug Sales, Deception/Forgery, and Other. Several different measures of criminal activity were utilized, all embodying the concept of crime-days per year at risk. Such crime-days measures involve annualizing, i.e., the number of crime-days accumulated by each subject in each category during a specified time at large in the community is expressed as crime-days per year at risk by taking the ratio of crime-days to total days at large and multiplying by 365. Addicts were compared by race/ethnicity (Black, White, and Hispanic) within cities as well as by race/ethnicity across cities using one-way analysis of variance procedures. Addict crime rates were also compared for the period of active addiction and nonaddiction. Several mean differences by race/ethnicity within city, as well as by race across cities, were noted. Moreover, crime rates tended to be higher during the period of active addiction. In this sense, then, drugs may be said to "drive" crime.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Direct-acting mutagenicity of diesel particulate extract is unchanged by addition of neat aromatic compounds to diesel fuel.
- Author
-
Jensen TE, Young W, Ball JC, and Freeman LE
- Subjects
- Animals, Mutagenicity Tests, Rats, Fuel Oils toxicity, Hydrocarbons toxicity, Mutagens, Petroleum toxicity
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Involvement in a drug subculture and abstinence following treatment among Puerto Rican narcotic addicts.
- Author
-
Snarr RW and Ball JC
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Puerto Rico ethnology, Remission, Spontaneous, Social Class, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, United States, Ethnicity, Social Environment, Substance-Related Disorders therapy
- Published
- 1974
47. Biological effects of incorporation of O6-methyldeoxyguanosine into Chinese hamster V79 cells.
- Author
-
Ball JC, McCormick JJ, and Maher VM
- Subjects
- Adenosine Deaminase Inhibitors, Animals, Cell Line, Cell Survival drug effects, Coformycin pharmacology, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, DNA Replication drug effects, Deoxyguanosine metabolism, Female, Deoxyguanosine analogs & derivatives, Ovary metabolism
- Abstract
Analysis of the biological effects of specific DNA alkylations by simple alkylating agents is complicated by the variety of sites involved. It is, therefore, of value to be able to incorporate into cellular DNA nucleosides alkylated in a single position, e.g., O6-methyldeoxyguanosine. Such cellular incorporation is particularly difficult to achieve because this nucleoside is rapidly demethylated by adenosine deaminase. We have attempted to achieve such incorporation into the DNA of V79 cells by using coformycin, an inhibitor of adenosine deaminase, and by forcing the cells to depend on exogenous purines by the use of medium containing aminopterin. The DNA of V79 cells exposed to O6-methyl-[8-3H]deoxyguanosine (2.4 microM, sp. act. 14500 Ci/mole) showed an incorporation level of 4 X 10(-8) nucleotides. When 1000-fold higher concentrations were employed (3-15 mM, sp. act. 1.6 Ci/mole), significant cytotoxicity and inhibition of DNA synthesis was observed. However, because it was not economically feasible to administer high specific activity O6-methyldeoxyguanosine to the cells at these concentrations, we could not determine the amount of labeled nucleoside incorporated into DNA. Examination of the frequency of 6-thioguanine-resistant cells in these treated populations showed no significant increase above the background level. Comparison of the cytotoxic effect of O6-methyldeoxyguanosine with deoxyadenosine showed that the toxicity induced by O6-methyldeoxyguanosine could have resulted from mimicry of deoxyadenosine, rather than by incorporation of the alkylated nucleoside itself.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Catalyst-free sodium borohydride reduction as a guide in the identification of direct-acting Ames assay mutagens in diesel-particle extracts.
- Author
-
Ball JC, Young WC, and Salmeen IT
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Mutagenicity Tests, Oxidation-Reduction, Pyrenes toxicity, Salmonella typhimurium genetics, Borohydrides analysis, Mutagens, Vehicle Emissions toxicity
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Crime as a source of income for narcotic addicts.
- Author
-
Nurco DN, Cisin IH, and Ball JC
- Subjects
- Black or African American, Humans, Maryland, White People, Crime, Income, Opioid-Related Disorders economics
- Abstract
Although it has been well documented that narcotic addicts derive the bulk of their income from criminal activities and that there are major differences between black and white addicts, interview data presented in this paper show little difference between the two races with respect to the degree of dependence on criminal income. However, the results also highlight the diversity among narcotic addicts in that there are some individuals who derive none of their funds from illegal sources, thus suggesting that not all addicts should be treated in the same manner.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. 11- and 12-chloromethylbenzo[a]pyrene are potent direct-acting mutagens in the Ames assay.
- Author
-
Ball JC, Foxall-VanAken S, Leon AA, Daub GH, and Vander Jagt DL
- Subjects
- Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Mutagenicity Tests, Benzopyrenes toxicity, Mutagens, Salmonella typhimurium genetics
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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