110 results on '"Gunter EW"'
Search Results
2. Field-study screening of blood folate concentrations: specimen stability and finger-stick sampling
- Author
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O’Broin, SD, primary, Kelleher, BP, additional, Davoren, A, additional, and Gunter, EW, additional
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- 1997
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3. Serum carotenoid concentrations and their reproducibility in children in Belize
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Apgar, J, primary, Makdani, D, additional, Sowell, AL, additional, Gunter, EW, additional, Hegar, A, additional, Potts, W, additional, Rao, D, additional, Wilcox, A, additional, and Smith, JC, additional
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- 1996
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4. Effect of smoking on serum nutrient concentrations in African-American women
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Pamuk, ER, primary, Byers, T, additional, Coates, RJ, additional, Vann, JW, additional, Sowell, AL, additional, Gunter, EW, additional, and Glass, D, additional
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- 1994
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5. Homocysteine and vitamin B12 concentrations and mortality rates in type 2 diabetes.
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Looker HC, Fagot-Campagna A, Gunter EW, Pfeiffer CM, Sievers ML, Bennett PH, Nelson RG, Hanson RL, and Knowler WC
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the role of homocysteine as a risk factor for mortality in diabetic subjects. METHODS: Homocysteine, vitamin B(12), and folate concentrations were measured in stored sera of 396 diabetic Pima Indians aged > or = 40 years when examined between 1982 and 1985. Vital status was assessed through 2001. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Over a median follow-up of 15.7 years, there were 221 deaths-76 were due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), 36 to diabetes/nephropathy and 34 to infections. Homocysteine was positively associated with mortality from all causes (hazard rate ratio (HRR) for highest versus lowest tertile of homocysteine = 1.70, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.18-2.46), from diabetes/nephropathy (HRR = 2.39, 95% CI 0.94-6.11) and from infectious diseases (HRR = 3.39, 95% CI 1.19-9.70), but not from CVD (HRR = 1.16, 95% CI 0.62-2.17) after adjustment for age, sex and diabetes duration. Homocysteine correlated with serum creatinine (r = 0.50), and the relationships with mortality rates were not significant after adjustment for creatinine. Vitamin B(12) was positively associated with all-cause mortality (HRR for 100 pg/mL difference adjusted for age, sex and diabetes duration = 1.15, 95% CI 1.08-1.22) and death from diabetes/nephropathy (HRR = 1.27, 95% CI 1.10-1.46). The association between homocysteine and mortality in type 2 diabetes is not causal, but is confounded by renal disease in Pima Indians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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6. Within-person variance in biochemical indicators of iron status: effects on prevalence estimates
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Looker, AC, primary, Sempos, CT, additional, Liu, KA, additional, Johnson, CL, additional, and Gunter, EW, additional
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- 1990
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7. Biochemical indicators of B vitamin status in the US population after folic acid fortification: results from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999-2000.
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Pfeiffer CM, Caudill SP, Gunter EW, Osterloh J, and Sampson EJ
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mandatory folic acid fortification of cereal-grain products was introduced in the United States in 1998 to decrease the risk that women will have children with neural tube defects. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to determine the effect of folic acid fortification on concentrations of serum and red blood cell (RBC) folate, serum vitamin B-12, and plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) and methylmalonic acid (MMA) in the US population. DESIGN: Blood was collected from a nationally representative sample of approximately 7300 participants aged > or = 3 y in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) during 1999-2000 and was analyzed for these B vitamin-status indicators. The results were compared with findings from the prefortification survey NHANES III (1988-1994). RESULTS: The reference ranges (5th-95th percentiles) were 13.1-74.3 nmol/L for serum folate, 347-1167 nmol/L for RBC folate, and 179-738 pmol/L for serum vitamin B-12. For plasma tHcy and MMA, the reference ranges for serum vitamin B-12-replete participants with normal serum creatinine concentrations were 3.2-10.7 mumol/L and 60-210 nmol/L, respectively. The prevalence of low serum folate concentrations (<6.8 nmol/L) decreased from 16% before to 0.5% after fortification. In elderly persons, the prevalence of high serum folate concentrations (>45.3 nmol/L) increased from 7% before to 38% after fortification; 3% had marginally low serum vitamin B-12 concentrations (<148 pmol/L) and 7% had elevated plasma MMA concentrations (>370 nmol/L). Seventy-eight percent of the US population had plasma tHcy concentrations <9 micromol/L. CONCLUSIONS: Every segment of the US population appears to benefit from folic acid fortification. Continued monitoring of B vitamin concentrations in the US population is warranted. Copyright © 2005 American Society for Clinical Nutrition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
8. Serum total homocysteine concentrations in the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (1991-1994): population reference ranges and contribution of vitamin status to high serum concentrations.
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Selhub J, Jacques PF, Rosenberg IH, Rogers G, Bowman BA, Gunter EW, Wright JD, Johnson CL, Selhub, J, Jacques, P F, Rosenberg, I H, Rogers, G, Bowman, B A, Gunter, E W, Wright, J D, and Johnson, C L
- Abstract
Background: The concentration of circulating total homocysteine is a sensitive marker of inadequate folate and vitamin B12 status. Elevated homocysteine concentrations are associated with an increased risk for vascular disease.Objective: To identify reference ranges for serum total homocysteine concentration in U.S. residents and quantify the contribution of circulating vitamin concentrations to high homocysteine concentrations.Design: Cross-sectional prevalence study.Setting: United States.Patients: A nationally representative sample of 3563 male participants and 4523 female participants 12 years of age or older who participated in the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.Measurements: Reference ranges (5th and 95th percentiles) for the total homocysteine concentration were defined among participants who were folate- and vitamin B12-replete and had normal creatinine concentrations. A high total homocysteine concentration was defined as one that exceeded the sex-specific 95th percentile for the reference sample (participants 20 to 39 years of age). The population attributable risk percentage was calculated to determine the contribution of low folate (<11 nmol/L) and vitamin B12 (<185 pmol/L) concentrations to a high homocysteine concentration.Results: Reference ranges for serum total homocysteine concentration increased with age; these ranges were 4.3 to 9.9 micromol/L for male participants and 3.3 to 7.2 micromol/L for female participants 12 to 19 years of age and from 5.9 to 15.3 micromol/L for men and 4.9 to 11.6 micromol/L for women 60 years of age or older. A high homocysteine concentration was defined as at least 11.4 micromol/L for male participants and at least 10.4 micromol/L for female participants. Approximately two thirds of the cases of high homocysteine concentrations were associated with low vitamin concentrations.Conclusions: Upper reference limits for the serum total homocysteine concentration increased with age and were higher for male participants than for female participants at all ages. In most cases, high homocysteine concentrations were associated with low serum vitamin concentrations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1999
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9. Serum total homocysteine concentrations in adolescent and adult Americans: results from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
- Author
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Jacques PF, Rosenberg IH, Rogers G, Selhub J, Bowman BA, Gunter EW, Wright JD, and Johnson CL
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BACKGROUND: The elevation of circulating total homocysteine concentrations in a fasting state is associated with an increased risk of occlusive vascular disease. OBJECTIVE: The primary goals of this study were to describe the distribution of serum total homocysteine concentrations in the United States and to test for differences in homocysteine concentrations among sex, age, and race-ethnicity categories. DESIGN: Using surplus sera from phase 2 of the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, we measured serum total homocysteine concentrations for a nationally representative sample of 3766 males and 4819 females aged > or = 12 y. RESULTS: Age-adjusted geometric mean total homocysteine concentrations were 9.6 and 7.9 mmol/L in non-Hispanic white males and females, 9.8 and 8.2 mmol/L in non-Hispanic black males and females, and 9.4 and 7.4 mmol/L in Mexican American males and females, respectively. Age-adjusted geometric mean total homocysteine concentrations were significantly lower in females than in males in each race-ethnicity group (P < 0.01) and were significantly lower in Mexican American females than in non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black females (P < 0.01). There was a significant age-sex interaction (P < 0.01), reflecting the fact that homocysteine concentrations in females tended to diverge from those in males at younger ages and converge with those in males at older ages. CONCLUSIONS: The first data on homocysteine concentrations in a nationally representative sample of Americans confirm the age and sex differences reported previously in nonrepresentative samples. These data also indicate that differences between Mexican American and non-Hispanic females may influence circulating homocysteine concentrations. Copyright (c) 1999 American Society for Clinical Nutrition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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10. Screening for diabetes mellitus in adults. The utility of random capillary blood glucose measurements.
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Engelgau MM, Thompson TJ, Smith PJ, Herman WH, Aubert RE, Gunter EW, Wetterhall SF, Sous ES, Ali MA, Engelgau, M M, Thompson, T J, Smith, P J, Herman, W H, Aubert, R E, Gunter, E W, Wetterhall, S F, Sous, E S, and Ali, M A
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- 1995
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11. Field-study screening of blood folate concentrations: specimen stability and finger-stick sampling.
- Author
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O'Broin SD, Kelleher BP, Davoren A, and Gunter EW
- Abstract
We describe optimized procedures for field studies of blood folate concentrations by using finger-stick blood sampling and include relevant studies on blood folate stability. We introduce whole-blood folate adjustment using sample hemoglobin (folate/hemoglobin, nmol/g) as a novel and practical tool yielding accurate and precise results when blood volume or dilution is unknown. Red cell folate concentrations (nmol/L) of 11,887 Americans correlated well with hemoglobin-corrected whole-blood folate concentrations (r2 = 0.993; red cell folate = 0.347 x hemoglobin folate + 1 nmol/L), which supports the approach of using the mean cell hemoglobin concentration (g/L) to interconvert red cell and hemoglobin folate data. Folate concentrations in capillary (finger stick) and venous blood samples from 28 normal donors were similar (P > 0.87), correlating closely (r = 0.98, P < 0.001). Whole-blood samples (collected into K2-EDTA-containing evacuated tubes) in field studies are best stored intact at 4 degrees C until they can be processed and frozen (-20 degrees C). Specific knowledge of blood folate stability is essential in planning and designing field studies. Copyright (c) 1997 American Society for Clinical Nutrition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
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12. Prospective study of serum vitamin E levels and esophageal and gastric cancers.
- Author
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Taylor PR, Qiao Y, Abnet CC, Dawsey SM, Yang CS, Gunter EW, Wang W, Blot WJ, Dong Z, Mark SD, Taylor, Philip R, Qiao, You-Lin, Abnet, Christian C, Dawsey, Sanford M, Yang, Chung S, Gunter, Elaine W, Wang, Wen, Blot, William J, Dong, Zhi-Wei, and Mark, Steven D
- Abstract
Participants in the General Population Trial, a randomized nutrition intervention trial in Linxian, China, who received a combination of selenium, beta-carotene, and vitamin E supplements, had statistically significantly lower cancer mortality rates than those who did not receive the supplements. In the current study, we used a case-cohort design to examine the association between pre-trial serum vitamin E levels and the risks of developing esophageal and gastric cancers during the trial. We measured serum alpha- and gamma-tocopherol and cholesterol levels in 1072 case patients with incident esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC), gastric cardia cancer (GCC), or gastric noncardia cancer (GNCC) and in 1053 control subjects. The relative risks for comparisons of the highest to the lowest quartiles of serum alpha-tocopherol were 0.63 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.44 to 0.91) for ESCC, 0.84 (95% CI = 0.55 to 1.26) for GCC, and 2.05 (95% CI = 0.89 to 4.75) for GNCC. Serum gamma-tocopherol level was not associated with the incidence of any of these cancers. Our findings provide support for the role of alpha-tocopherol in the etiology of upper gastrointestinal cancers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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13. Methane seep in shallow-water permeable sediment harbors high diversity of anaerobic methanotrophic communities, Elba, Italy
- Author
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S Emil Ruff, Hanna eKuhfuss, Gunter eWegener, Christian eLott, Alban eRamette, Johanna eWiedling, Katrin eKnittel, and Miriam eWeber
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Mediterranean ,AOM ,cold seep ,ANME ,anaerobic oxidation of methane ,sulfate reduction ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
The anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) is a key biogeochemical process regulating methane emission from marine sediments into the hydrosphere. AOM is largely mediated by consortia of anaerobic methanotrophic archaea (ANME) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), and has mainly been investigated in deep-sea sediments. Here we studied methane seepage at four spots located at 12 m water depth in coastal, organic-carbon depleted permeable sands off the Island of Elba (Italy). We combined biogeochemical measurements, sequencing-based community analyses and in situ hybridization to investigate the microbial communities of this environment. Increased alkalinity, formation of free sulfide and nearly stoichiometric methane oxidation and sulfate reduction rates up to 200 nmol g-1 day-1 indicated the predominance of sulfate-coupled AOM. With up to 40 cm thickness the zones of AOM activity were unusually large and occurred in deeper sediment horizons (20–50 cm below seafloor) as compared to diffusion-dominated deep-sea seeps, which is likely caused by advective flow of pore water due to the shallow water depth and permeability of the sands. Hydrodynamic forces also may be responsible for the substantial phylogenetic and unprecedented morphological diversity of AOM consortia inhabiting these sands, including the clades ANME-1a/b, ANME-2a/b/c, ANME-3 and their partner bacteria SEEP-SRB1a and SEEP-SRB2. High microbial dispersal, the availability of diverse energy sources and high habitat heterogeneity might explain that the emission spots shared few microbial taxa, despite their physical proximity. Although the biogeochemistry of this shallow methane seep was very different to that of deep-sea seeps, their key functional taxa were very closely related, which supports the global dispersal of key taxa and underlines strong selection by methane as the predominant energy source. Mesophilic, methane-fueled ecosystems in shallow-water permeable sediments may comprise distinct microbial habitats due to their unique biogeochemical and physical characteristics. To link AOM phylotypes with seep habitats and to enable future meta-analyses we thus propose that seep environment ontology needs to be further specified.
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- 2016
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14. Metabolic capabilities of microorganisms involved in and associated with the anaerobic oxidation of methane
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Gunter eWegener, Viola eKrukenberg, S. Emil Ruff, Matthias Y. Kellermann, and Katrin eKnittel
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Archaea ,Physiology ,methanogenesis ,syntrophy ,anaerobic oxidation of methane ,Disproportionation ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
In marine sediments the anaerobic oxidation of methane with sulfate as electron acceptor (AOM) is responsible for the removal of a major part of the greenhouse gas methane. AOM is performed by consortia of anaerobic methane-oxidizing archaea (ANME) and their specific partner bacteria. The physiology of these organisms is poorly understood, which is due to their slow growth with doubling times in the order of months and the phylogenetic diversity in natural and in vitro AOM enrichments. Here we study sediment-free long-term AOM enrichments that were cultivated from seep sediments sampled off the Italian Island Elba (20°C; hereon called E20) and from hot vents of the Guaymas Basin, Gulf of California, cultivated at 37°C (G37) or at 50°C (G50). These enrichments were dominated by consortia of ANME-2 archaea and Seep-SRB2 partner bacteria (E20) or by ANME-1, forming consortia with Seep-SRB2 bacteria (G37) or with bacteria of the HotSeep-1 cluster (G50). We investigate lipid membrane compositions as possible factors for the different temperature affinities of the different ANME clades and show autotrophy as characteristic feature for both ANME clades and their partner bacteria. Although in the absence of additional substrates methane formation was not observed, methanogenesis from methylated substrates (methanol and methylamine) could be quickly stimulated in the E20 and the G37 enrichment. Responsible for methanogenesis are archaea from the genus Methanohalophilus and Methanococcoides, which are minor community members during AOM (1 to 7‰ of archaeal 16S rRNA gene amplicons). In the same two cultures also sulfur disproportionation could be quickly stimulated by addition of zero-valent colloidal sulfur. The isolated partner bacteria are likewise minor community members (1 to 9‰ of bacterial 16S rRNA gene amplicons, whereas the dominant partner bacteria (Seep-SRB1a, Seep-SRB2 or HotSeep-1) did not grow on elemental sulfur. Our results support a functioning of AOM as syntrophic interaction of obligate methanotrophic archaea that transfer non-molecular reducing equivalents (i.e. via direct interspecies electron transfer) to obligate sulfate-reducing partner bacteria. Additional katabolic processes in these enrichments but also in sulfate methane interfaces are likely performed by minor community members.
- Published
- 2016
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15. Microbial habitat connectivity across spatial scales and hydrothermal temperature gradients at Guaymas Basin
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Stefanie eMeyer, Gunter eWegener, Karen G Lloyd, Andreas eTeske, Antje eBoetius, and Alban eRamette
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marine sediments ,multivariate statistics ,bacterial diversity ,community ecology ,Guaymas basin ,hydrothermal vent microbiology ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
The Guaymas Basin (Gulf of California) hydrothermal vent area is known as a dynamic and hydrothermally vented sedimentary system, where the advection and production of a variety of different metabolic substrates support a high microbial diversity and activity in the seafloor. The main objective of our study was to explore the role of temperature and other environmental factors on community diversity, such as the presence of microbial mats and seafloor bathymetry within one hydrothermally vented field of 200 × 250 m dimension. In this field, temperature increased strongly with sediment depth reaching the known limit to life within a few decimeters. Potential sulfate reduction rate as a key community activity parameter was strongly affected by in situ temperature and sediment depth, declining from high rates of 1-5 μmol ml-1 d-1 at the surface to the detection limit below 5 cm sediment depth, despite the presence of sulfate and hydrocarbons. Automated Ribosomal Intergenic Spacer Analysis yielded a high-resolution fingerprint of the dominant members of the bacterial community. Our analyses showed strong temperature and sediment depth effects on bacterial cell abundance and Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) number, both declining by more than one order of magnitude below the top 5 cm of the sediment surface. Another fraction of the variation in diversity and community structure was explained by differences in the local bathymetry and spatial position within the vent field. Nevertheless, more than 80% of all detected OTUs were shared among the different temperature realms and sediment depths, after being classified as cold (T
- Published
- 2013
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16. Repository Planning, Design, and Engineering: Part II-Equipment and Costing.
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Baird PM and Gunter EW
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- Automation, Laboratory economics, Automation, Laboratory instrumentation, Cryopreservation economics, Equipment and Supplies economics, Humans, Models, Economic, Specimen Handling economics, Cryopreservation instrumentation, Specimen Handling instrumentation, Tissue Banks economics
- Abstract
Part II of this article discusses and provides guidance on the equipment and systems necessary to operate a repository. The various types of storage equipment and monitoring and support systems are presented in detail. While the material focuses on the large repository, the requirements for a small-scale startup are also presented. Cost estimates and a cost model for establishing a repository are presented. The cost model presents an expected range of acquisition costs for the large capital items in developing a repository. A range of 5,000-7,000 ft(2) constructed has been assumed, with 50 frozen storage units, to reflect a successful operation with growth potential. No design or engineering costs, permit or regulatory costs, or smaller items such as the computers, software, furniture, phones, and barcode readers required for operations have been included.
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- 2016
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17. Repository Planning, Design, and Engineering: Part I--Infrastructure.
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Baird PM and Gunter EW
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- Air Conditioning, Electric Power Supplies, Floors and Floorcoverings, Heating, Lighting, Security Measures, Biological Specimen Banks organization & administration, Planning Techniques
- Abstract
This is a two-part review describing the planning, engineering, and design considerations for building a new repository for biological and environmental samples. Part I addresses the physical infrastructure requirements for a repository; Part II will cover equipment and costing. Planning for construction of a new repository is a complex process requiring comprehensive preplanning and adherence to many regulatory and safety requirements. Guidance and a planning timeline are provided for many of the physical aspects and large capital acquisition costs for the expansion of an existing repository, or the creation of a new repository facility, using an available unoccupied building such as a former warehouse. This article provides a comprehensive set of information about every aspect of repository construction and operation to be considered in the planning process, and also addresses all aspects of designing and constructing a new repository in an existing structure. The engineering and design parameters for the repository are discussed in detail.
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- 2016
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18. Building a Biobank.
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Baird PM, Gunter EW, and Vaught J
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- Humans, Biological Specimen Banks organization & administration, Facility Design and Construction
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- 2016
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19. Quality management of biorepositories.
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Grizzle WE, Gunter EW, Sexton KC, and Bell WC
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- Accreditation, Bias, Body Fluids, Certification, Clinical Audit, Humans, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Quality Control, Tissue Banks, Biological Specimen Banks standards
- Abstract
Biomedical investigators require high quality human tissue to support their research; thus, an important aspect of the provision of tissues by biorepositories is the assurance of high quality and consistency of processing specimens. This is best accomplished by a quality management system (QMS). This article describes the basis of a QMS program designed to aid biorepositories that want to improve their operations. In 1983, the UAB Tissue Collection and Biobanking Facility (TCBF) introduced a QMS program focused on providing solid tissues to support a wide range of research; this QMS included a quality control examination of the specific specimens provided for research. Similarly, the Division of Laboratory Sciences at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) introduced a QMS program for their laboratory analyses, focused primarily on bodily fluids. The authors of this article bring together the experience of the QMS programs at these two sites to facilitate the development or improvement of quality management systems of a wide range of biorepositories.
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- 2015
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20. Hematological and iron-related analytes--reference data for persons aged 1 year and over: United States, 1988-94.
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Hollowell JG, van Assendelft OW, Gunter EW, Lewis BG, Najjar M, and Pfeiffer C
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Ethnicity, Female, Hematology methods, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Vital Statistics, Hemoglobins analysis, Iron blood
- Abstract
Objectives: This report presents national estimates of hematologic and iron-related analytes for persons 1 year of age and over, by age, sex, and race/ethnicity., Methods: The analysis is based on data from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) (1988-94), which was designed to provide information on the health and nutritional status of the civilian noninstitutionalized U.S. population. The sample used for these analyses included the 26,372 participants who had laboratory tests., Results: This report provides mean, standard error of the mean, median, and percentile laboratory values for the U.S. population, 1988-94, for hematological and iron-related analytes. In addition, percentage distributions are provided., Conclusions: Data on hematological and iron analytes provide reference values for clinical and longitudinal comparisons.
- Published
- 2005
21. Moderate alcohol consumption and levels of antioxidant vitamins and isoprostanes in postmenopausal women.
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Hartman TJ, Baer DJ, Graham LB, Stone WL, Gunter EW, Parker CE, Albert PS, Dorgan JF, Clevidence BA, Campbell WS, Tomer KB, Judd JT, and Taylor PR
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- Ascorbic Acid blood, Biomarkers blood, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Humans, Lipid Peroxidation drug effects, Lipid Peroxidation physiology, Middle Aged, Oxidative Stress physiology, Risk Factors, Selenium blood, Vitamin E blood, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Antioxidants metabolism, Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Ethanol administration & dosage, Isoprostanes blood, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Postmenopause blood
- Abstract
Background: Although alcohol intake has been positively associated with breast cancer risk in epidemiologic studies, the mechanisms mediating this association are speculative., Objective: The Postmenopausal Women's Alcohol Study was designed to explore the effects of moderate alcohol consumption on potential risk factors for breast cancer. In the present analysis, we evaluated the relationship of alcohol consumption with antioxidant nutrients and a biomarker of oxidative stress., Design: Participants (n=53) consumed a controlled diet plus each of three treatments (15 or 30 g alcohol/day or a no-alcohol placebo beverage), during three 8-week periods in random order. We measured the antioxidants, vitamin E (alpha (alpha)- and gamma (gamma)-tocopherols), selenium, and vitamin C in fasting blood samples which were collected at the end of diet periods, treated and frozen for assay at the end of the study. We also measured 15-F(2t)-IsoP isoprostane, produced by lipid peroxidation, which serves as an indicator of oxidative stress and may serve as a biomarker for conditions favorable to carcinogenesis., Results: After adjusting for BMI (all models) and total serum cholesterol (tocopherol and isoprostane models) we observed a significant 4.6% decrease (P=0.02) in alpha-tocopherol and a marginally significant 4.9% increase (P=0.07) in isoprostane levels when women consumed 30 g alcohol/day (P=0.06 and 0.05 for overall effect of alcohol on alpha-tocopherol and isoprostanes, respectively). The other antioxidants were not significantly modified by the alcohol treatment., Conclusions: These results suggest that moderate alcohol consumption increases some biomarkers of oxidative stress in postmenopausal women.
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- 2005
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22. Selenium and colorectal adenoma: results of a pooled analysis.
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Jacobs ET, Jiang R, Alberts DS, Greenberg ER, Gunter EW, Karagas MR, Lanza E, Ratnasinghe L, Reid ME, Schatzkin A, Smith-Warner SA, Wallace K, and Martínez ME
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- Adult, Aged, Anticarcinogenic Agents administration & dosage, Colonic Polyps prevention & control, Colonoscopy, Confidence Intervals, Dietary Fiber administration & dosage, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Assessment, Selenium Compounds administration & dosage, Adenoma blood, Adenoma prevention & control, Anticarcinogenic Agents blood, Colorectal Neoplasms blood, Colorectal Neoplasms prevention & control, Selenium Compounds blood
- Abstract
Background: Secondary analyses of data from a large randomized clinical trial have suggested that intake of the trace element selenium reduces risk of colorectal neoplasia, but epidemiologic studies have not shown a consistent protective association., Methods: We conducted a combined analysis of data from three randomized trials--the Wheat Bran Fiber Trial, the Polyp Prevention Trial, and the Polyp Prevention Study--which tested the effects of various nutritional interventions for colorectal adenoma prevention among participants who recently had an adenoma removed during colonoscopy. Selenium concentrations were measured from blood specimens from a total of 1763 trial participants, and quartiles of baseline selenium were established from the pooled data. To estimate the association between baseline selenium and colorectal adenoma risk, odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated using logistic regression modeling. All statistical tests were two-sided., Results: Individual study results among participants whose blood selenium concentrations were in the highest versus the lowest quartile varied in magnitude (Polyp Prevention Trial: OR = 0.67, 95% CI = 0.43 to 1.05; P(trend) = .21; Wheat Bran Fiber Trial: OR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.40 to 1.10; P(trend) = .13, and Polyp Prevention Study: OR = 0.57, 95% CI = 0.34 to 0.95, P(trend) = .04). Analyses of the pooled data showed that individuals whose blood selenium values were in the highest quartile (median = 150 ng/mL) had statistically significantly lower odds of developing a new adenoma compared with those in the lowest quartile (OR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.50 to 0.87; P(trend) = .006)., Conclusions: The inverse association between higher blood selenium concentration and adenoma risk supports previous findings indicating that higher selenium status may be related to decreased risk of colorectal cancer.
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- 2004
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23. Effects of moderate alcohol consumption on folate and vitamin B(12) status in postmenopausal women.
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Laufer EM, Hartman TJ, Baer DJ, Gunter EW, Dorgan JF, Campbell WS, Clevidence BA, Brown ED, Albanes D, Judd JT, and Taylor PR
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- Aged, Cross-Over Studies, DNA Methylation, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Homocysteine blood, Humans, Methylmalonic Acid blood, Middle Aged, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Ethanol administration & dosage, Folic Acid blood, Nutritional Status drug effects, Postmenopause blood, Vitamin B 12 blood
- Abstract
Background: Although alcohol intake has been positively associated with breast cancer risk in epidemiologic studies, a causal relationship has not been established, and the mechanisms mediating this association are speculative. Alcohol may act through altered status of folate and vitamin B(12), two vitamins required for DNA methylation and nucleotide synthesis, and thus cell integrity. Although the effects of heavy alcohol intake on folate and vitamin B(12) status have been well-documented, few studies have addressed the effects of moderate alcohol intake in a controlled setting., Objective: The objective of this study was to determine the effects of moderate alcohol intake on folate and vitamin B(12) status in healthy, well-nourished, postmenopausal women., Design: The study design was a randomized, diet-controlled crossover intervention. Postmenopausal women (n=53) received three 8-week alcohol treatments in random order: 0, 15, and 30 g/day. Treatment periods were preceded by 2-5-week washout periods. Blood collected at baseline and week 8 of each treatment period was analyzed for serum folate, vitamin B(12), homocysteine (HCY), and methylmalonic acid (MMA) concentrations., Results: After adjusting for body mass index (BMI), a significant 5% decrease was observed in mean serum vitamin B(12) concentrations from 0 to 30 g of alcohol/day (461.45+/-30.26 vs 440.25+/-30.24 pg/ml; P=0.03). Mean serum HCY concentrations tended to increase by 3% from 0 to 30 g of alcohol/day (9.44+/-0.37 vs 9.73+/-0.37 micromol/l; P=0.05). Alcohol intake had no significant effects on serum folate or MMA concentrations., Conclusions: Among healthy, well-nourished, postmenopausal women, moderate alcohol intake may diminish vitamin B(12) status.
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- 2004
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24. Determination of folate vitamers in human serum by stable-isotope-dilution tandem mass spectrometry and comparison with radioassay and microbiologic assay.
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Pfeiffer CM, Fazili Z, McCoy L, Zhang M, and Gunter EW
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- Autoanalysis, Chromatography, Liquid, Humans, Indicator Dilution Techniques, Leucovorin blood, Microbiological Techniques, Radioligand Assay, Sensitivity and Specificity, Serum, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization, Tetrahydrofolates blood, Folic Acid blood
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Background: Current clinical methods for folate give different results and cannot measure the various forms of folate. We developed an isotope-dilution tandem mass spectrometric method coupled to liquid chromatography (LC/MS/MS) as a candidate reference method for 5-methyltetrahydrofolic acid (5MeTHF), 5-formyltetrahydrofolic acid (5FoTHF), and folic acid (FA) in human serum., Methods: We quantitatively isolated folates from 275 microL of serum with a phenyl solid-phase extraction cartridge, then detected and quantified them in stabilized serum extracts by positive-ion electrospray ionization LC/MS/MS. We used an isocratic mobile phase of acetic acid in organic solvent on a C(8) analytical column. (13)C-labeled folates were used as internal standards., Results: Limits of detection in serum were 0.13 (5MeTHF), 0.05 (5FoTHF), and 0.07 (FA) nmol/L. Within- and between-run imprecision (CV) was <7% for 5MeTHF and <10% for 5FoTHF at concentrations >0.5 nmol/L, and <10% for FA at concentrations >2.0 nmol/L. Total folate (TFOL) concentrations determined by competitive protein binding radioassay were approximately 9% lower than results obtained with LC/MS/MS. The microbiologic assay gave approximately 15% higher TFOL results with FA calibrator and no difference with 5MeTHF calibrator. The mean (SD) [range] TFOL in 42 sera was 35.5 (17.8) [6.5-75.6] nmol/L. Thirty-two samples with TFOL <50 nmol/L had, on average, 93.3% 5MeTHF, 2.3% FA, and 4.4% 5FoTHF. Ten samples with TFOL >50 nmol/L had, on average, 81.7% 5MeTHF, 15.7% FA, and 2.5% 5FoTHF., Conclusions: This stable-isotope-dilution LC/MS/MS method can quantify 5MeTHF, 5FoTHF, and FA in serum. Currently used clinical assays agree with this candidate reference method.
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- 2004
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25. Prospective study of serum selenium concentrations and esophageal and gastric cardia cancer, heart disease, stroke, and total death.
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Wei WQ, Abnet CC, Qiao YL, Dawsey SM, Dong ZW, Sun XD, Fan JH, Gunter EW, Taylor PR, and Mark SD
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- Adult, Aged, Body Mass Index, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell mortality, China, Esophageal Neoplasms mortality, Female, Heart Diseases blood, Heart Diseases mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Risk, Stomach Neoplasms mortality, Stroke blood, Stroke mortality, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell blood, Esophageal Neoplasms blood, Selenium blood, Stomach Neoplasms blood
- Abstract
Background: We previously reported an inverse association between prediagnostic serum selenium concentrations and the risk of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) and gastric cardia cancer (GCC) but not gastric noncardia cancer (GNCC) in a nested study from the Nutrition Intervention Trial in Linxian, China., Objective: We examined the relation between baseline serum selenium and the subsequent risk of death from ESCC, GCC, GNCC, heart disease (HD), stroke, and total death over 15 y of follow-up (1986-2001)., Design: We measured baseline serum selenium concentrations in 1103 subjects randomly selected from a larger trial cohort. We identified 516 deaths during the 15-y follow up, including 75 from ESCC, 36 from GCC, 116 from HD, and 167 from stroke. Relative risks (RRs) and 95% CIs were estimated by using Cox proportional hazards regression models. Reported RRs estimated the change in risk conferred by a 25% increase in serum selenium relative to the population distribution. All estimates were adjusted for sex, age, smoking, drinking, and serum cholesterol., Results: We found significant inverse associations between baseline serum selenium and death from ESCC (RR: 0.83; 95% CI: 0.71, 0.98) and GCC (0.75; 0.59, 0.95). Trends toward inverse associations were noted for death from HD (0.89; 0.78, 1.01; P = 0.07), but no association was noted for total death (0.96; 0.90, 1.02) or stroke (0.99; 0.88, 1.11)., Conclusion: Population-wide selenium supplementation in the region of China with low serum selenium and high incidences of ESCC and GCC merits serious consideration.
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- 2004
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26. Serum iron and iron-binding capacity: a round-robin interlaboratory comparison study.
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Blanck HM, Pfeiffer CM, Caudill SP, Reyes M, Gunter EW, Imperatore G, van Assendelft OW, Strider S, and Dearth T
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- Blood Chemical Analysis methods, Blood Chemical Analysis standards, Hemochromatosis blood, Humans, Iron metabolism, Quality Control, Reproducibility of Results, United States, Blood Proteins metabolism, Iron blood, Iron-Binding Proteins blood, Laboratories standards
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- 2003
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27. HFE genotype and transferrin saturation in the United States.
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Cogswell ME, Gallagher ML, Steinberg KK, Caudill PhD SP, Looker AC, Bowman BA, Gunter EW, Franks AL, Satten GA, Khoury MJ, and Grummer-Strawn LM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Genotype, Hemochromatosis Protein, Heterozygote, Homozygote, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Statistical, Odds Ratio, United States, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I genetics, Membrane Proteins genetics, Transferrin genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Examine the penetrance (defined by high transferrin saturation [TS]) of C282Y and H63D in the U.S. population., Methods: 5171 participants from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1992 to 1994., Results: 77.1% (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.3, 95.1) of men and 51.9% (95% CI, 0, 84.2) of women with C282Y homozygosity had high TS. The associations of H63D homozygosity with high TS were stronger in people aged 50 years or older than in younger persons. Among Mexican-Americans, simple H63D heterozygosity was associated with high TS., Conclusions: The associations between HFE genotype and high TS may vary by sex, age, and ethnic group.
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- 2003
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28. Homocysteine as a risk factor for nephropathy and retinopathy in Type 2 diabetes.
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Looker HC, Fagot-Campagna A, Gunter EW, Pfeiffer CM, Narayan KM, Knowler WC, and Hanson RL
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- Age Factors, Analysis of Variance, Arizona epidemiology, Biomarkers blood, Blood Glucose metabolism, Creatinine blood, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 blood, Diabetic Angiopathies blood, Diabetic Angiopathies epidemiology, Diabetic Nephropathies blood, Diabetic Retinopathy blood, Female, Folic Acid blood, Humans, Incidence, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Vitamin B 12 blood, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 physiopathology, Diabetic Nephropathies epidemiology, Diabetic Retinopathy epidemiology, Homocysteine blood, Indians, North American statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Aims/hypothesis: The aim of this study was to examine the relation between serum total homocysteine concentrations and microvascular complications in Pima Indians with Type 2 diabetes., Methods: Homocysteine concentrations were measured in frozen sera of 396 diabetic participants in a longitudinal study who were 40 years of age or older and who had attended one or more examinations between 1982 and 1985. Retinopathy was assessed by fundoscopy and nephropathy by an albumin:creatinine ratio greater than 300 mg/g. The incidence rate ratio for a 5 micro mol/l difference in homocysteine was calculated using proportional hazard regression., Results: The incidence of each complication was assessed in subjects without that complication at baseline and with more than one follow-up examination: 229 for nephropathy, 212 for retinopathy and 266 for proliferative retinopathy. There were 101 incident cases of nephropathy, 113 of retinopathy and 40 of proliferative retinopathy during a mean follow-up of 8.6, 7.5 and 8.9 years, respectively. Incidence of nephropathy was associated with homocysteine concentrations: IRR=1.42 (95% CI, 1.09-1.84, p=0.01); this remained statistically significant controlled for age, sex and duration of diabetes (p=0.03), but not when controlled for baseline renal function (p=0.4). Homocysteine concentrations were not associated with the incidence of any retinopathy IRR=1.14 (95%CI 0.89-1.46, p=0.3) but were associated with the incidence of proliferative retinopathy IRR=1.62 (95% CI 1.16-2.28, p=0.005); this association remained statistically significant when controlled for baseline renal function and diabetes duration (p=0.02)., Conclusions/interpretation: Increased homocysteine concentrations are associated with an increased risk for incidence of nephropathy and proliferative retinopathy; the relation with incidence of nephropathy seems to be explained by an association with baseline albuminuria status concentrations, whereas the relation with incidence of proliferative retinopathy does not.
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- 2003
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29. Erythrocyte protoporphyrin or hemoglobin: which is a better screening test for iron deficiency in children and women?
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Mei Z, Parvanta I, Cogswell ME, Gunter EW, and Grummer-Strawn LM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency blood, Child, Preschool, Erythrocyte Indices, Erythrocytes chemistry, Female, Ferritins blood, Humans, Infant, Male, Mass Screening, Middle Aged, Nutrition Surveys, Predictive Value of Tests, Protoporphyrins analysis, ROC Curve, Sensitivity and Specificity, United States, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency diagnosis, Hemoglobins analysis, Protoporphyrins blood
- Abstract
Background: Hemoglobin and erythrocyte protoporphyrin (EP) tests are commonly used to screen for iron deficiency. However, little research has been done to systematically evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of these 2 tests., Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of hemoglobin and EP measurements in predicting iron deficiency in preschool children and in women of childbearing age., Design: We examined data from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (n = 2613 children aged 1-5 y and n = 5175 nonpregnant women aged 15-49 y). Children or women with blood lead >or= 10 microg/dL were excluded from this study. We used the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve to characterize the sensitivity and specificity of hemoglobin and EP measurements in screening for iron deficiency, defined as having abnormal values for >or= 2 of the following 3 indexes: mean cell volume, transferrin saturation, and serum ferritin., Results: The ROC performance of EP was consistently better than that of hemoglobin for detecting iron deficiency in preschool children. However, in nonpregnant women, we found no significant difference between EP and hemoglobin in ROC performance for detecting iron deficiency. We observed the same results when we stratified the analyses by sex and race of the children and by race of the women., Conclusions: For children aged 1-5 y, EP is a better screening tool for iron deficiency than is hemoglobin. However, for nonpregnant women, EP and hemoglobin have similar sensitivity and specificity for predicting iron deficiency.
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- 2003
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30. Hyperhomocysteinemia and vitamin B-12 deficiency in elderly using Title IIIc nutrition services.
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Johnson MA, Hawthorne NA, Brackett WR, Fischer JG, Gunter EW, Allen RH, and Stabler SP
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- Activities of Daily Living, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Folic Acid blood, Georgia epidemiology, Geriatrics, Humans, Hyperhomocysteinemia epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Nutritional Status, Nutritional Support, Prevalence, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency drug therapy, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency epidemiology, Dietary Services, Hyperhomocysteinemia complications, Vitamin B 12 therapeutic use, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency complications
- Abstract
Background: The effect of the folate food fortification program on the prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia in the older population with coexisting vitamin B-12 deficiency is not known., Objective: The objective was to determine the prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia and vitamin B-12 deficiency in elderly who were using Title IIIc nutrition services, after folate food fortification in the United States., Design: Demographic, nutritional, cognitive, routine diagnostic, and serum methylmalonic acid (MMA) and total homocysteine (tHcy) tests were performed in a convenience sample of 103 elderly enrolled in nutrition service programs in rural northeast Georgia. A subgroup (n = 27) was treated with vitamin B-12, 2.5 mg, and a multivitamin with 400 micro g folic acid, 2 mg vitamin B-6, and 27 mg ferrous fumarate., Results: The total cohort included 103 participants (+/- SD age: 76.4 +/- 8.1; 80% female; 68% white, 32% African American). Vitamin B-12 deficiency (serum vitamin B-12 < 258 pmol/L and MMA > 271 nmol/L) was present in 23%. Mean serum folate was high, 39.3 nmol/L, and no subject had serum folate < 6.8 nmol/L. Mean tHcy was 17.6 +/- 7.2 micro mol/L in vitamin B-12-deficient subjects and 10.8 +/- 3.6 micro mol/L in those who were nondeficient. Determinants of high tHcy were vitamin B-12 deficiency, high serum creatinine, and low red blood cell folate. Those with vitamin B-12 deficiency were more likely to have poor cognition (58% compared with 20%, P < 0.001) and anemia (38% compared with 18%, P = 0.042). High-dose oral B-12 therapy lowered mean MMA and tHcy by 49% and 32%, respectively., Conclusion: Vitamin B-12 deficiency was prevalent and was associated with poor cognition, anemia, and hyperhomocysteinemia.
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- 2003
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31. Serum selenium levels in the US population: Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994.
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Niskar AS, Paschal DC, Kieszak SM, Flegal KM, Bowman B, Gunter EW, Pirkle JL, Rubin C, Sampson EJ, and McGeehin M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Child, Ethnicity, Female, Geography, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nutrition Surveys, Sex Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Selenium blood
- Abstract
The published literature on serum selenium levels in the US population describes studies on small samples that may not be representative of the US population. This analysis provides the first nationally representative serum selenium levels in the US population by age group, sex, race-ethnicity, poverty income ratio (PIR), geographic region, and urban status. The Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) is a national population-based cross-sectional survey with an in-person interview and serum selenium measurements. For the 18,597 persons for whom serum selenium values wereavailable in NHANES III, the mean concentration was 1.58 nmol/L and the median concentration was 1.56 nmol/L. Mean serum selenium levels differed by age group, sex, race ethnicity, PIR, and geographic region. The US population has slight differences in serum selenium levels by demographic factors.
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- 2003
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32. Blood folate levels on the Texas-Mexico border.
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Felkner M, Suarez L, Hendricks K, and Gunter EW
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- Adolescent, Adult, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Mexico ethnology, Pregnancy, Texas, Folic Acid blood, Folic Acid Deficiency prevention & control, Food, Fortified, Mexican Americans, Neural Tube Defects prevention & control, Pregnancy Complications prevention & control
- Abstract
The Texas-Mexico border population has a high prevalence of neural tube defects (NTDs). In 1998, in an effort to reduce the risk of NTD-affected pregnancies, the US Food and Drug Administration mandated folic acid fortification of enriched grain products. Since then, the median serum folate and red blood cell (RBC) folate levels of US women aged 15 through 44 years has risen. During 1995 through 2000, serum and RBC folate levels of 170 Mexican American women residing on the Texas-Mexico border who had delivered live, normal infants within the previous 3 months were tested. The median serum folate levels rose 46%, and RBC folate levels rose 44%. The increase suggests that food fortification may be affecting folate levels among populations with economic and cultural barriers to consuming fortified foods. However, more data are needed before we can assess the impact of food fortification on NTD rates on the border.
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- 2002
33. Hypovitaminosis D prevalence and determinants among African American and white women of reproductive age: third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994.
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Nesby-O'Dell S, Scanlon KS, Cogswell ME, Gillespie C, Hollis BW, Looker AC, Allen C, Doughertly C, Gunter EW, and Bowman BA
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- Adult, Aged, Animals, Body Mass Index, Calcifediol blood, Contraceptives, Oral administration & dosage, Diet, Dietary Supplements, Edible Grain, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Middle Aged, Milk, Odds Ratio, Reproduction, Seasons, Urban Population, Vitamin D administration & dosage, Black or African American, Black People, Nutrition Surveys, Vitamin D Deficiency epidemiology, White People
- Abstract
Background: Recent reports of rickets among African American children drew attention to the vitamin D status of these infants and their mothers. African American women are at higher risk of vitamin D deficiency than are white women, but few studies have examined determinants of hypovitaminosis D in this population., Objective: We examined the prevalence and determinants of hypovitaminosis D among African American and white women of reproductive age., Design: We examined 1546 African American women and 1426 white women aged 15-49 y who were not pregnant and who participated in the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (1988-1994). Hypovitaminosis D was defined as a serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration < or =37.5 nmol/L. Multiple logistic regression was used to examine the independent association of dietary, demographic, and behavioral determinants of hypovitaminosis D., Results: The prevalence of hypovitaminosis D was 42.4 +/- 3.1% ( +/- SE) among African Americans and 4.2 +/- 0.7% among whites. Among African Americans, hypovitaminosis D was independently associated with consumption of milk or breakfast cereal <3 times/wk, no use of vitamin D supplements, season, urban residence, low body mass index, and no use of oral contraceptives. Even among 243 African Americans who consumed the adequate intake of vitamin D from supplements (200 IU/d), 28.2 +/- 2.7% had hypovitaminosis D., Conclusions: The high prevalence of hypovitaminosis D among African American women warrants further examination of vitamin D recommendations for these women. The determinants of hypovitaminosis D among women should be considered when these women are advised on dietary intake and supplement use.
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- 2002
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34. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D status of adolescents and adults in two seasonal subpopulations from NHANES III.
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Looker AC, Dawson-Hughes B, Calvo MS, Gunter EW, and Sahyoun NR
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Sex Distribution, United States epidemiology, Nutrition Surveys, Seasons, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives, Vitamin D blood, Vitamin D Deficiency blood, Vitamin D Deficiency ethnology
- Abstract
Subclinical vitamin D deficiency may be common in certain subgroups in the U.S., but to date vitamin D data from other groups in the population have not been available. We used serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) data from 18,875 individuals examined in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III 1988-1994) to assess the vitamin D status of selected groups of the noninstitutionalized U.S. adolescent and adult population. Serum 25-OHD levels were measured by a radioimmunoassay kit (DiaSorin, Inc., Stillwater, MN; normal range 22.5-94 nmol/L). Because physical exams are performed in mobile vans in NHANES, data could not be collected in northern latitudes during the winter; instead data were collected in northern latitudes during summer and in southern latitudes in winter. To address this season-latitude aspect of the NHANES design, we stratified the sample into two seasonal subpopulations (winter/lower latitude and summer/higher latitude) before examining vitamin D status. Less than 1% of the winter/lower latitude subpopulation had vitamin D deficiency (25-OHD <17.5 nmol/L). However, the prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency in this group ranged from 1%-5% with 25-OHD <25 nmol/L to 25%-57% with 25-OHD <62.5 nmol/L, even though the median latitude for this subsample (32 degrees N) was considerably lower than the latitude at which vitamin D is not synthesized during winter months (approximately 42 degrees N). With the exception of elderly women, prevalence rates of vitamin D insufficiency were lower in the summer/higher latitude subpopulation (<1%-3% with 25-OHD <25 nmol/L to 21%-49% with 25-OHD <62.5 nmol/L). Mean 25-OHD levels were highest in non-Hispanic whites, intermediate in Mexican Americans, and lowest in non-Hispanic blacks. Our findings suggest that vitamin D deficiency is unlikely in the two seasonal subpopulations of noninstitutionalized adolescents and adults that can be validly assessed in NHANES III. However, vitamin D insufficiency is more common in these two seasonal subpopulations. Of particular interest is that insufficiency occurred fairly frequently in younger individuals, especially in the winter/lower latitude subsample. Our findings support continued monitoring of this vitamin in the U.S. population.
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- 2002
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35. Serum TSH, T(4), and thyroid antibodies in the United States population (1988 to 1994): National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III).
- Author
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Hollowell JG, Staehling NW, Flanders WD, Hannon WH, Gunter EW, Spencer CA, and Braverman LE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Demography, Female, Humans, Iodine urine, Male, Mexican Americans statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, White People statistics & numerical data, Autoantibodies analysis, Iodide Peroxidase immunology, Nutrition Surveys, Thyroglobulin immunology, Thyrotropin blood, Thyroxine blood
- Abstract
NHANES III measured serum TSH, total serum T(4), antithyroperoxidase (TPOAb), and antithyroglobulin (TgAb) antibodies from a sample of 17,353 people aged > or =12 yr representing the geographic and ethnic distribution of the U.S. population. These data provide a reference for other studies of these analytes in the U.S. For the 16,533 people who did not report thyroid disease, goiter, or taking thyroid medications (disease-free population), we determined mean concentrations of TSH, T(4), TgAb, and TPOAb. A reference population of 13,344 people was selected from the disease-free population by excluding, in addition, those who were pregnant, taking androgens or estrogens, who had thyroid antibodies, or biochemical hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. The influence of demographics on TSH, T(4), and antibodies was examined. Hypothyroidism was found in 4.6% of the U.S. population (0.3% clinical and 4.3% subclinical) and hyperthyroidism in 1.3% (0.5% clinical and 0.7% subclinical). (Subclinical hypothyroidism is used in this paper to mean mild hypothyroidism, the term now preferred by the American Thyroid Association for the laboratory findings described.) For the disease-free population, mean serum TSH was 1.50 (95% confidence interval, 1.46-1.54) mIU/liter, was higher in females than males, and higher in white non-Hispanics (whites) [1.57 (1.52-1.62) mIU/liter] than black non-Hispanics (blacks) [1.18 (1.14-1.21) mIU/liter] (P < 0.001) or Mexican Americans [1.43 (1.40-1.46) mIU/liter] (P < 0.001). TgAb were positive in 10.4 +/- 0.5% and TPOAb, in 11.3 +/- 0.4%; positive antibodies were more prevalent in women than men, increased with age, and TPOAb were less prevalent in blacks (4.5 +/- 0.3%) than in whites (12.3 +/- 0.5%) (P < 0.001). TPOAb were significantly associated with hypo or hyperthyroidism, but TgAb were not. Using the reference population, geometric mean TSH was 1.40 +/- 0.02 mIU/liter and increased with age, and was significantly lower in blacks (1.18 +/- 0.02 mIU/liter) than whites (1.45 +/- 0.02 mIU/liter) (P < 0.001) and Mexican Americans (1.37 +/- 0.02 mIU/liter) (P < 0.001). Arithmetic mean total T(4) was 112.3 +/- 0.7 nmol/liter in the disease-free population and was consistently higher among Mexican Americans in all populations. In the reference population, mean total T(4) in Mexican Americans was (116.3 +/- 0.7 nmol/liter), significantly higher than whites (110.0 +/- 0.8 nmol/liter) or blacks (109.4 +/- 0.8 nmol/liter) (P < 0.0001). The difference persisted in all age groups. In summary, TSH and the prevalence of antithyroid antibodies are greater in females, increase with age, and are greater in whites and Mexican Americans than in blacks. TgAb alone in the absence of TPOAb is not significantly associated with thyroid disease. The lower prevalence of thyroid antibodies and lower TSH concentrations in blacks need more research to relate these findings to clinical status. A large proportion of the U.S. population unknowingly have laboratory evidence of thyroid disease, which supports the usefulness of screening for early detection.
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- 2002
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36. Evaluation of the Drew Scientific ds30 homocysteine assay in comparison with the Centers for Disease Control and prevention reference HPLC method.
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Zhang M, Gunter EW, and Pfeiffer CM
- Subjects
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S., Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Humans, Reagent Kits, Diagnostic, Reference Standards, United States, Homocysteine blood
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- 2001
37. Serum total homocysteine concentration is related to self-reported heart attack or stroke history among men and women in the NHANES III.
- Author
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Morris MS, Jacques PF, Rosenberg IH, Selhub J, Bowman BA, Gunter EW, Wright JD, and Johnson CL
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Female, Folic Acid blood, Heart Arrest blood, Heart Arrest epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nutrition Surveys, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Stroke blood, Stroke epidemiology, Vitamin B 12 blood, Heart Arrest etiology, Homocysteine blood, Hyperhomocysteinemia complications, Self Disclosure, Stroke etiology
- Abstract
High circulating total homocysteine (tHcy) concentration, which is influenced by folate and vitamin B-12 status, is a suspected cause of cardiovascular events. This relation has been investigated in both case-control and prospective studies but has not been evaluated for different sex x age subgroups of the general U.S. population. We used data on adult (i.e., aged > or =40 y) male (n = 1097) and female (n = 1107) participants in the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, excluding diabetics and those supplemented with estrogen, vitamins or minerals, to evaluate the association between serum tHcy concentration and self-report of heart attack or stroke. After adjustment for age, race-ethnicity, smoking, blood pressure, blood pressure medication, body mass index and serum concentrations of creatinine and cholesterol, past events were reported 2.4 (95% confidence interval 1.0-5.5) times as often by men with tHcy concentration of >12 micromol/L as by men with lower values. The odds ratio for women was 2.6 (95% confidence interval 1.1-6.6) after adjustment for the same factors plus menopausal status. A stronger relation in men aged < or =60 y compared with older men may help reconcile conflicting results of earlier studies.
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- 2000
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38. Analysis of factors influencing the comparison of homocysteine values between the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) and NHANES 1999+.
- Author
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Pfeiffer CM, Caudill SP, Gunter EW, Bowman BA, Jacques PF, Selhub J, Johnson CL, Miller DT, and Sampson EJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Humans, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Homocysteine blood, Nutrition Surveys
- Abstract
Two important changes occurred in the time between the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) (1991-1994) and the later survey (NHANES 1999+) regarding total homocysteine (tHcy), i.e., a change in matrix from serum to plasma and a change in analytical methods. The goals of this study were to determine the magnitude of potential differences between plasma and serum with regard to tHcy concentrations, and between the two analytical methods used in these surveys. Optimally prepared plasma, serum allowed to clot for 30 and 60 min at room temperature and serum allowed to clot for 30 and 60 min and subjected to four freeze-thaw cycles, prepared from blood samples collected from 30 healthy people, were analyzed by both methods. Serum samples had significantly higher tHcy concentrations than plasma samples, and the difference increased with longer clotting time. Freeze-thaw cycles had little or no effect on the variability or bias in the serum sample results. The tHcy results produced by the two analytical methods were significantly different, but consistent across sample types. On average, the results of the method used in NHANES III were lower by 0.64 micromol/L; however, the relative bias varied with tHcy concentration. The tHcy results determined in surplus serum from NHANES III overestimated tHcy concentrations by approximately 10% compared with optimally prepared plasma. The average method bias was 6% between the two analytical methods. On the basis of changes in matrix and methodology, direct comparison of tHcy results between the two surveys is inappropriate.
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- 2000
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39. Prospective study of serum selenium levels and incident esophageal and gastric cancers.
- Author
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Mark SD, Qiao YL, Dawsey SM, Wu YP, Katki H, Gunter EW, Fraumeni JF Jr, Blot WJ, Dong ZW, and Taylor PR
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Case-Control Studies, China epidemiology, Esophageal Neoplasms mortality, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Prospective Studies, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk, Risk Factors, Selenium administration & dosage, Sex Distribution, Stomach Neoplasms mortality, Esophageal Neoplasms blood, Esophageal Neoplasms epidemiology, Selenium blood, Stomach Neoplasms blood, Stomach Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: From March 1986 through May 1991, we conducted a randomized nutritional intervention trial, the General Population Trial, in Linxian, China, a region with epidemic rates of squamous esophageal and adenomatous gastric cardia cancers. We found that participants who received selenium, beta-carotene, and vitamin E had significantly lower cancer mortality rates than those who did not. In the current study, we examined the relationship between selenium levels measured in pretrial (1985) sera from participants and the subsequent risk of developing squamous esophageal, gastric cardia, and gastric non-cardia cancers during the trial., Methods: This study was designed and analyzed in accord with a stratified case-cohort sampling scheme, with the six strata defined by sex and three age categories. We measured serum selenium levels in 590 case subjects with esophageal cancer, 402 with gastric cardia cancers, and 87 with gastric non-cardia cancers as well as in 1062 control subjects. Relative risks (RRs), absolute risks, and population attributable risk for cancers were estimated on the basis of the Cox proportional hazards models. All statistical tests are two-sided., Results: We found highly significant inverse associations of serum selenium levels with the incidence of esophageal (P: for trend <10(-4)) and gastric cardia (P: for trend <10(-6)) cancers. The RR and 95% confidence interval (CI) for comparison of highest to lowest quartile of serum selenium was 0.56 (95% CI = 0.44-0.71) for esophageal cancer and 0.47 (95% CI = 0.33-0.65) for gastric cardia cancer. The population proportion of these cancers that is attributable to low selenium levels was 26.4% (95% CI = 14.45-38.36). We found no evidence for a gradient of serum selenium associated with incidence of gastric non-cardia cancer (P: for trend =.96), with an RR of 1.07 (95% CI = 0.55-2.08) for the highest to lowest quartile of serum selenium., Conclusions: Our study supports findings from previous prospective studies and randomized trials that variations in selenium levels affect the incidence of certain cancers. In the United States, where intervention trials of selenium are in the planning stages, consideration should be given to including populations at high risk for squamous esophageal and gastric cardia cancers.
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- 2000
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40. Serum carotenoids are associated with increased lung cancer risk among alcohol drinkers, but not among non-drinkers in a cohort of tin miners.
- Author
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Ratnasinghe D, Forman MR, Tangrea JA, Qiao Y, Yao SX, Gunter EW, Barrett MJ, Giffen CA, Erozan Y, Tockman MS, and Taylor PR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, China epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Lung Neoplasms epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Lung Neoplasms blood, Mining, Tin, beta Carotene blood
- Abstract
To examine the association between pre-diagnostic serum carotenoid levels and lung cancer risk and the effects of alcohol intake on the carotenoid-lung cancer relationship, we conducted a case-control study in an occupational cohort from the Yunnan Tin Corporation in China. During 6 years of follow-up, 339 cases of confirmed lung cancer were diagnosed. Among these cases, those who donated pre-diagnostic blood (n = 108) were eligible for this study. For each case, two individuals alive and free of cancer at the time of case diagnosis, matched on age, sex, and date of blood collection, were selected as controls. Serum beta-carotene (odds ratios (ORs) for tertiles: 1, 1.3, 2.0) and beta-cryptoxanthin (ORs for tertiles: 1, 1.8, 2.9) levels were positively associated with lung cancer risk after adjustment for tobacco use and radon exposure. Among alcohol drinkers, higher serum carotenoid levels were significantly associated with increased lung cancer risk (alpha-carotene OR 2.2, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1-4.4, beta-carotene OR 7.6, 95% CI 3.1-18.6, lutein/zeaxanthin OR 2.3, 95% CI 1.2-6.6 and beta-cryptoxanthin OR 7.6, 95% CI 2.7-21.5). Conversely, risk estimates among non-drinkers suggest a possible protective association for higher carotenoid levels.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Exposure of the U.S. population aged 6 years and older to cadmium: 1988-1994.
- Author
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Paschal DC, Burt V, Caudill SP, Gunter EW, Pirkle JL, Sampson EJ, Miller DT, and Jackson RJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Retrospective Studies, United States, Cadmium urine, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Pollutants urine, Public Health
- Abstract
Cadmium was measured in urine specimens from 22,162 participants in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III 1988-1994). Urine cadmium, expressed either as uncorrected (microg/L) or creatinine corrected (microg/g creatinine) increased with age and with smoking. The arithmetic mean value for urine cadmium in the U.S. population was 0.57 microg/L or 0.48 microg/g creatinine. Based on our estimates, about 2.3% of the U.S. population have urine cadmium concentrations greater than 2 microg/g creatinine, and 0.2% have concentrations greater than 5 microg/g creatinine, the current World Health Organization health-based exposure limit.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Serum tocopherols, selenium and lung cancer risk among tin miners in China.
- Author
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Ratnasinghe D, Tangrea JA, Forman MR, Hartman T, Gunter EW, Qiao YL, Yao SX, Barett MJ, Giffen CA, Erozan Y, Tockman MS, and Taylor PR
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Case-Control Studies, China epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Environmental Monitoring, Epidemiological Monitoring, Humans, Incidence, Logistic Models, Longitudinal Studies, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Lung Neoplasms etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Radon analysis, Risk Assessment, Sensitivity and Specificity, Statistics, Nonparametric, Tin, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Lung Neoplasms epidemiology, Mining, Occupational Diseases epidemiology, Selenium blood, Vitamin E blood
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the association of prediagnostic serum antioxidants and lung cancer risk we conducted a case-control study nested in an occupational cohort of tin miners., Methods: Male workers free of cancer enrolled in the cohort. During up to 6 years of follow-up, 339 lung cancer cases were diagnosed and, among these cases, those who donated blood prospectively (n = 108) were eligible for this study. For each case, two controls alive and free of cancer at the time of case diagnosis were matched on age and date of blood collection., Results: Overall, we observed no association between serum alpha-tocopherol, gamma-tocopherol or selenium levels and lung cancer risk. However, a significant gradient of decreasing lung cancer risk with increasing serum alpha-tocopherol was apparent for men less than 60 years old (odds ratio by tertile: 1.0, 0.9, 0.2; trend p = 0.002). Alpha-tocopherol was also protective in men who reported no alcohol drinking (OR by tertile: 1.0, 0.6, 0.3; trend p = 0.008)., Conclusion: Although there were no significant overall associations between prospectively collected serum alpha-tocopherol, gamma-tocopherol or selenium and incidence of lung cancer, results from this study suggest that higher alpha-tocopherol levels may be protective in men less than 60 years old and in those who do not drink alcohol.
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- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Mass psychogenic illness attributed to toxic exposure at a high school.
- Author
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Jones TF, Craig AS, Hoy D, Gunter EW, Ashley DL, Barr DB, Brock JW, and Schaffner W
- Subjects
- Environmental Exposure analysis, Female, Gasoline, Hazardous Substances adverse effects, Humans, Male, Odorants, Psychophysiologic Disorders economics, Psychophysiologic Disorders etiology, Schools, Sex Factors, Tennessee epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks economics, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Hazardous Substances analysis, Mass Behavior, Psychophysiologic Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Methods: Mass psychogenic illness may be difficult to differentiate from illness caused by bioterrorism, rapidly spreading infection, or toxic substances. We investigated symptoms attributed to exposure to toxic gas at a high school in Tennessee. In November 1998, a teacher noticed a 'gasoline-like' smell in her classroom, and soon thereafter she had a headache, nausea, shortness of breath, and dizziness. The school was evacuated, and 80 students and 19 staff members went to the emergency room at the local hospital; 38 persons were hospitalized overnight. Five days later, after the school had reopened, another 71 persons went to the emergency room. An extensive investigation was performed by several government agencies., Results: We were unable to find a medical or environmental explanation for the reported illnesses. The persons who reported symptoms on the first day came from 36 classrooms scattered throughout the school. The most frequent symptoms (in this group and the group of people who reported symptoms five days later) were headache, dizziness, nausea, and drowsiness. Blood and urine specimens showed no evidence of carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds, pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls, paraquat, or mercury. There was no evidence of toxic compounds in the environment. A questionnaire administered a month later showed that the reported symptoms were significantly associated with female sex, seeing another ill person, knowing that a classmate was ill, and reporting an unusual odor at the school., Conclusions: The illness attributed to toxic exposure had features of mass psychogenic illness - notably, widespread subjective symptoms thought to be associated with environmental exposure to a toxic substance in the absence of objective evidence of an environmental cause. Alleviation of the anxiety surrounding an episode of mass psychogenic illness requires prompt recognition and a detailed investigation.
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- 2000
- Full Text
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44. Comparison of serum and plasma methylmalonic acid measurements in 13 laboratories: An international study.
- Author
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Pfeiffer CM, Smith SJ, Miller DT, and Gunter EW
- Subjects
- Calibration, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry standards, Humans, Methylmalonic Acid standards, Quality Control, Statistics as Topic, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency blood, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency diagnosis, Laboratories standards, Methylmalonic Acid blood
- Abstract
Background: Detection of cobalamin deficiency is increasingly important, and methylmalonic acid (MMA) appears to be a useful marker. Information on interlaboratory variation and on methodological differences for MMA in serum and plasma is limited., Methods: Using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, 13 laboratories participated in a 2-day analysis of 8 serum and 11 EDTA-plasma specimens. Results were analyzed for imprecision, recovery, and differences among laboratories and methods., Results: The mean among-laboratory imprecision (CV) was 19% and 21% for serum and plasma samples, respectively, and 9.3% and 7.8% for serum and plasma samples with added MMA, respectively. The mean within-laboratory (among-run) CV was 13% for both serum and plasma samples and 5.2% and 4.9% for serum and plasma samples with added MMA. Within-method imprecision was the same or higher than among-method imprecision. The mean among-laboratory recovery of MMA was 105% and 95% in serum and plasma, respectively. Most laboratories showed a proportional bias relative to the consensus mean of up to 15%. Two laboratories reported results that on average were almost 30% higher than the consensus mean., Conclusions: No method differences were found, but significant among-laboratory imprecision was found in the present study. Improvements are needed to reduce the analytical imprecision of most laboratories, and attention must be focused on calibration issues. Differences among laboratories can be improved by introducing high-quality reference materials and by instituting external quality assessment programs.
- Published
- 1999
45. Folic acid fortification.
- Author
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Pfeiffer CM, Gunter EW, and Miller DT
- Subjects
- Aged, Folic Acid blood, Humans, Middle Aged, Folic Acid administration & dosage, Food, Fortified
- Published
- 1999
46. Screening of folate status with use of dried blood spots on filter paper.
- Author
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O'Broin SD and Gunter EW
- Subjects
- Drug Stability, Erythrocytes chemistry, Filtration instrumentation, Humans, Linear Models, Paper, Reproducibility of Results, Blood Stains, Folic Acid blood, Mass Screening methods, Nutritional Status
- Abstract
Background: Dried blood spots (DBS) on filter paper have been a successful and economical matrix for neonatal screening., Objective: Our objective was to develop and evaluate an optimized method for DBS folate analysis and to assess DBS folate stability., Design: DBS were eluted from paper by sonication in 5 g ascorbic acid/L containing 0.1% (by vol) Triton X-100 and hemoglobin folate values (HF; as pmol/g) were calculated from DBS eluate folate and hemoglobin concentrations., Results: Over 95% of DBS folate was eluted during a standardized sonication cycle and DBS folate assay reproducibility was acceptable both within (CV: <8%) and between (CV: <9%) runs. HF means (+/-1 SD) from finger-stick DBS and conventional venous methods were 2513 +/- 1144 and 2607 +/- 1195 pmol/g, respectively, in blood samples taken concurrently from 80 donors, and they correlated well (r = 0.97, P < 0.001). HF values and erythrocyte folate measures may be interconverted by using the mean cell hemoglobin concentration., Conclusion: The DBS matrix has potential as an inexpensive and practical option for folate screening studies.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Comparison of plasma total homocysteine measurements in 14 laboratories: an international study.
- Author
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Pfeiffer CM, Huff DL, Smith SJ, Miller DT, and Gunter EW
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Fluorescence Polarization Immunoassay, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Spectrometry, Fluorescence, Homocysteine blood
- Abstract
Background: Information on interlaboratory variation and especially on methodological differences for plasma total homocysteine is lacking., Methods: We studied 14 laboratories that used eight different method types: HPLC with electrochemical detection (HPLC-ED); HPLC with fluorescence detection (HPLC-FD) further subdivided by type of reducing/derivatizing agent; gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS); enzyme immunoassay (EIA); and fluorescence polarization immunoassay (FPIA). Three of these laboratories used two methods. The laboratories participated in a 2-day analysis of 46 plasma samples, 4 additional plasma samples with added homocystine, and 3 plasma quality-control (QC) pools. Results were analyzed for imprecision, recovery, and methodological differences., Results: The mean among-laboratory and among-run within-laboratory imprecision (CV) was 9.3% and 5.6% for plasma samples, 8.8% and 4.9% for samples with added homocystine, and 7.6% and 4.2% for the QC pools, respectively. Difference plots showed values systematically higher than GC/MS for HPLC-ED, HPLC-FD using sodium borohydride/monobromobimane (however, for only one laboratory), and EIA, and lower values for HPLC-FD using trialkylphosphine/4-(aminosulfonyl)-7-fluoro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole. The two HPLC-FD methods using tris(2-carboxyethyl) phosphine/ammonium 7-fluoro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole-4-sulfonate (SBD-F) or tributyl phosphine/SBD-F, and the FPIA method showed no detectable systematic difference from GC/MS., Conclusions: Among-laboratory variations within one method can exceed among-method variations. Some of the methods tested could be used interchangeably, but there is an urgent need to improve analytical imprecision and to decrease differences among methods.
- Published
- 1999
48. No difference in iron status between children with low and moderate lead exposure.
- Author
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Serwint JR, Damokosh AI, Berger OG, Chisolm JJ Jr, Gunter EW, Jones RL, Rhoads GG, and Rogan W
- Subjects
- Anemia, Iron-Deficiency epidemiology, Black People, Child, Preschool, Deficiency Diseases epidemiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Lead, Male, Prevalence, Statistics, Nonparametric, United States epidemiology, Black or African American, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Iron Deficiencies, Iron Metabolism Disorders epidemiology, Lead Poisoning epidemiology
- Abstract
We compared the iron status between children 11 to 33 months old with confirmed blood lead levels of 20 to 44 microg/dL and demographically similar children with blood lead levels of <10 microg/dL. There were no differences. Laboratory investigation or empirical treatment for iron deficiency is not justified on the basis of moderately elevated blood lead levels alone.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Blood lead concentration and children's anthropometric dimensions in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), 1988-1994.
- Author
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Ballew C, Khan LK, Kaufmann R, Mokdad A, Miller DT, and Gunter EW
- Subjects
- Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Anthropometry, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Environmental Exposure, Female, Health Surveys, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Male, Regression Analysis, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, White People statistics & numerical data, Growth, Lead blood
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the association between lead exposure and children's physical growth., Design: Cross-sectional analysis of data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994., Participants: A total of 4391 non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, and Mexican-American children age 1 to 7 years., Measurements and Results: We investigated the association between blood lead concentration and stature, head circumference, weight, and body mass index with multiple regression analysis adjusting for sex, ethnic group, iron status, dietary intake, medical history, sociodemographic factors, and household characteristics. Blood lead concentration was significantly negatively associated with stature and head circumference. Regression models predicted reductions of 1. 57 cm in stature and 0.52 cm in head circumference for each 0.48 micromol/L (10 micrograms/dL) increase in blood lead concentration. We did not find significant associations between blood lead concentration and weight or body mass index., Conclusions: The significant negative associations between blood lead concentration and stature and head circumference among children age 1 through 7 years, similar in magnitude to those reported for the Second National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1976-1980, suggest that although mean blood lead concentrations of children have been declining in the United States for 2 decades, lead exposure may continue to affect the growth of some children.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Age-related hearing loss, vitamin B-12, and folate in elderly women.
- Author
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Houston DK, Johnson MA, Nozza RJ, Gunter EW, Shea KJ, Cutler GM, and Edmonds JT
- Subjects
- Aged, Audiometry, Pure-Tone, Female, Folic Acid administration & dosage, Folic Acid Deficiency blood, Health Status, Hearing Loss, Functional classification, Hearing Loss, Functional diagnosis, Humans, Logistic Models, Middle Aged, Vitamin B 12 administration & dosage, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency blood, Aging, Diet, Folic Acid Deficiency complications, Hearing Loss, Functional etiology, Vitamin B 12 Deficiency complications
- Abstract
Background: Hearing impairment is 1 of the 4 most prevalent chronic conditions in the elderly. However, the biological basis of age-related hearing loss is unknown., Objective: The objective was to test the hypothesis that age-related hearing loss may be associated with poor vitamin B-12 and folate status., Design: A thorough audiometric assessment was conducted in 55 healthy women aged 60-71 y. Hearing function was determined by the average of pure-tone air conduction thresholds at 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz and was categorized into 2 groups for logistic regression analyses: normal hearing (<20 dB hearing level; n = 44) and impaired hearing (> or = 20 dB hearing level; n = 11)., Results: Mean age was the same (65 y) for the normal hearing and impaired hearing groups. Pure-tone averages were inversely correlated with serum vitamin B-12 (r = -0.58, P = 0.0001) and red cell folate (r = -0.37, P = 0.01). Women with impaired hearing had 38% lower serum vitamin B-12 (236 compared with 380 pmol/L, respectively, P = 0.008) and 31% lower red cell folate (425 compared with 619 nmol/L, respectively, P = 0.02) than women with normal hearing. Among participants who did not take supplements containing vitamin B-12 or folate, women with impaired hearing had 48% lower serum vitamin B-12 (156 compared with 302 pmol/L, respectively, P = 0.0007) and 43% lower red cell folate (288 compared with 502 nmol/L, respectively, P = 0.001) than women with normal hearing., Conclusion: Poor vitamin B-12 and folate status may be associated with age-related auditory dysfunction.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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