39 results on '"J, Begerow"'
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2. Fremdstoffbelastung im Blut von Erwachsenen und Kindern - Epidemiologische Querschnittserhebungen zum Zusammenhang mit Außenluftbelastungen in NRW.
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U. Ranft, L. Dunemann, J. Begerow, I. Freier, R. Dolgner, and H. J. Einbrodt
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- 1994
3. Platinum levels in nasal lavage fluid as a biomarker for traffic-related exposure and inflammation in children
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J Begerow, Paul J. A. Borm, Andrea Becker, Roel P. F. Schins, D. Polat, and M. Turfeld
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Environmental Engineering ,Fine particulate ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Inflammation ,Germany ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Child ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Platinum ,Air Pollutants ,Environmental Exposure ,Nasal Lavage Fluid ,Pollution ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Weak association ,Nasal Lavage ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Biomarkers ,Environmental Monitoring ,Respiratory tract - Abstract
Platinum (Pt) is a well-known constituent of particles emitted by catalytic converters during car operation. To evaluate Pt as a potential marker for traffic related particle exposure, we investigated Pt content along with metals vanadium (V) and chromium (Cr) in coarse and fine particulate matter (PM), sampled in four areas with different traffic density, as well as in the nasal lavage (NAL) of 67 children (average age: 6 years) living in these areas. The different sites were characterised by significant differences in air pollutants including PM, NO, NO 2 , CO and Cr, but differences in V or Pt were absent. No significant differences in neutrophil and epithelial cell counts or concentrations of the neutrophil chemoattractant interleukin-8 (IL-8) were found in the NAL of children living in the different areas. In addition, the concentrations of V, Cr and Pt, which were detectable in 64%, 73% and 93% of the individuals, respectively, did not differ between the different locations. However, in the NAL of the children, a significant correlation between Pt and the number of neutrophils/ml (r=0.40, p
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- 2004
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4. Concentrations of lead in blood, hair and saliva of German children living in three different areas of traffic density
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Helga Idel, Ulrich Ranft, N Schmitz, J Begerow, Michael Wilhelm, U Rostek, and A Pesch
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Male ,Saliva ,Environmental Engineering ,Urban Population ,Test group ,Biological fluid ,Animal science ,Germany ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Tissue Distribution ,Child ,Lead (electronics) ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Vehicle Emissions ,Whole blood ,Air Pollutants ,biology ,Significant difference ,Environmental engineering ,Environmental Exposure ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Motor Vehicles ,Lead ,Tasa ,Female ,Geometric mean ,Hair - Abstract
Lead contents in hair, whole blood and saliva were determined for 245 healthy children (121 male, 124 female, age: 8-10 years) from three residential areas of Düsseldorf (North-Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) with different traffic densities. The geometric mean for the lead content in hair was found to be 0.87 microg/g (range: 0.2-9.9 microg/g) for the entire test group. While the levels of lead in hair in the suburban population were significantly lower than in the two city centre populations, no significant difference concerning the lead content in hair could be detected in the latter. The geometric mean for lead concentration in whole blood amounted to 25.0 microg/l (range: 8.0-154 microg/l). There was no significant difference between the sub-groups. The lead concentrations found in saliva were rather low (range:1.5-47.0 microg/l). Of the values, 89% were below the detection limit of 1.5 microg/l. Due to reduced levels of lead in fuel, the present study exposes that the amount of lead in the children examined has further decreased compared to preceding surveys. The correlation between the lead content in hair and the road traffic density was not corroborated by the findings with regard to amounts of lead found in blood, indicating that residual lead from fuel does not result in a substantial burden of lead found in the whole body. In contrast to levels of lead found in blood, levels of lead found in hair may be influenced more by environmental conditions. Saliva is not a suitable material for biological monitoring with respect to lead exposure in children.
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- 2002
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5. Determination of dichloroanilines in human urine by GC–MS, GC–MS–MS, and GC–ECD as markers of low-level pesticide exposure
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J Begerow, H Hajimiragha, L Dunemann, and K Wittke
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Urine ,Propanil ,Mass spectrometry ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Bridged Bicyclo Compounds ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Humans ,Linuron ,Oxazoles ,Detection limit ,Aniline Compounds ,Chromatography ,Molecular Structure ,Herbicides ,Chemistry ,Hydantoins ,Phenylurea Compounds ,Environmental Exposure ,General Chemistry ,Aminoimidazole Carboxamide ,Fungicides, Industrial ,Electron capture detector ,Diuron ,Cattle ,Procymidone ,Gas chromatography ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Methods for the determination of 3,4-dichloroaniline (3,4-DCA) and 3,5-dichloroaniline (3,5-DCA) as common markers of eight non-persistent pesticides in human urine are presented. 3,5-DCA is a marker for the exposure to the fungicides vinclozolin, procymidone, iprodione, and chlozolinate. Furthermore the herbicides diuron, linuron, neburon, and propanil are covered using their common marker 3,4-DCA. The urine samples were treated by basic hydrolysis to degrade all pesticides, metabolites, and their conjugates containing the intact moieties completely to the corresponding dichloroanilines. After addition of the internal standard 4-chloro-2-methylaniline, simultaneous steam distillation extraction (SDE) followed by liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) was carried out to produce, concentrate and purify the dichloroaniline moieties. Gas chromatography (GC) with mass spectrometric (MS) and tandem mass spectrometric (MS-MS) detection and also detection with an electron-capture detector (ECD) after derivatisation with heptafluorobutyric anhydride (HFBA) were employed for separation, detection, and identification. Limit of detection of the GC-MS-MS and the GC-ECD methods was 0.03 and 0.05 microg/l, respectively. Absolute recoveries obtained from a urine sample spiked with the internal standard, 3,5-, and 3,4-DCA, ranged from 93 to 103% with 9-18% coefficient of variation. The three detection techniques were compared concerning their performance, expenditure and suitability for their application in human biomonitoring studies. The described procedure has been successfully applied for the determination of 3,4- and 3,5-DCA in the urine of nonoccupationally exposed volunteers. The 3,4-DCA levels in these urine samples ranged between 0.13 and 0.34 microg/g creatinine or 0.11 and 0.56 microg/l, while those for 3,5-DCA were between 0.39 and 3.33 microg/g creatinine or 0.17 and 1.17 microg/l.
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- 2001
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6. Passive sampling for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in air at environmentally relevant concentration levels
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U. Ranft, E. Jermann, J. Begerow, Lothar Dunemann, and T. Keles
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Carbon disulfide ,Chromatography ,Biochemistry ,Toluene ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electron capture detector ,Adsorption ,chemistry ,law ,Environmental chemistry ,Flame ionization detector ,Gas chromatography ,Benzene ,Trichloroethane - Abstract
A sensitive and reliable method is described for the determination of aromatic and chlorinated hydrocarbons (benzene, toluene, o-, m-, p-xylene, trichloromethane, trichloroethane, trichloroethene and tetrachloroethene) in indoor and outdoor air at environmental concentration levels. The procedure can be easily extended to other VOCs. Using passive samplers the VOCs have been adsorbed onto charcoal during a four-week sampling period and subsequently desorbed with carbon disulfide. After injection with a cold split-splitless multi-injector the VOCs have been separated by capillary gas chromatography. Quantification has been achieved using an electron capture detector (ECD) and a flame ionization detector (FID) switched in series. A limit of about 1 μg/m3 for aromatic hydrocarbons and of about 0.01 μg/m3 for chlorinated hydrocarbons has been obtained. The procedure has been successfully applied in the framework of a field study to measure indoor and outdoor air concentrations in Essen and Borken, two differently polluted areas of Northrhine-Westphalia.
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- 1995
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7. Anwendung der ICP-MS für das Humanbiomonitoring [Biomonitoring Methods in German language, 1999]
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P. Schramel, H. Emons, and J. Begerow
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Oncology ,German ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Biomonitoring ,medicine ,language ,Biomarker (medicine) ,language.human_language - Published
- 2012
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8. Arsenic species (As(III), As(V), monomethylarsonic acid, dimethylarsinic acid) [Biomonitoring Methods, 2000]
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R. Sur, L. Dunemann, and J. Begerow
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Detection limit ,Accuracy and precision ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,law.invention ,Specimen collection ,law ,Environmental chemistry ,Biomonitoring ,Calibration ,Sample preparation ,Atomic absorption spectroscopy ,Arsenic - Abstract
Published in the series Analyses of Hazardous Substances in Biological Materials, Vol. 7 (2000) The article contains sections titled: General principles Equipment, chemicals and solutions Equipment Chemicals Solutions Calibration standards Specimen collection and sample preparation Operational parameters Operational conditions for liquid chromatography Operational conditions for the flow injection system Operational conditions for atomic absorption spectrometry Principle of the HPLC method Analytical determination Calibration Calculation of the analytical result Standardisation and quality control Reliability of the method Precision Accuracy Detection limits Sources of error Discussion of the method Keywords: determination in urine; liquid chromatography; hydride AAS; analysis in biological materials; occupational monitoring; analytical method; biomarker; metabolites
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- 2012
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9. Platin und Gold [Biomonitoring Methods in German language, 2000]
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L. Dunemann and J. Begerow
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German ,Chemistry ,Biomonitoring ,language ,language.human_language ,Linguistics - Published
- 2012
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10. Platinum, gold [Biomonitoring Methods, 2000]
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J. Begerow and L. Dunemann
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Detection limit ,Accuracy and precision ,Chromatography ,Specimen collection ,Chemistry ,Biomonitoring ,Calibration ,Sample preparation ,Inductively coupled plasma ,Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry - Abstract
Published in the series Analyses of Hazardous Substances in Biological Materials, Vol. 7 (2000) The article contains sections titled: Summary Equipment, chemicals and solutions Equipment Chemicals Solutions Calibration standards Specimen collection and sample preparation Specimen collection UV digestion Operational parameters Analytical determination Calibration and calculation of the analytical result Standardisation and quality control Reliability of the method Precision Accuracy Detection limit Sources of error Discussion of the method Keywords: determination in urine; inductively coupled plasma sector field mass spectrometry; ICP-MS; analysis in biological materials; occupational monitoring; analytical method; biomarker; metabolites
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- 2012
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11. Arsenspezies (As(III), As(V), Monomethylarsonsäure, Dimethylarsinsäure) [Biomonitoring Methods in German language, 2000]
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R. Sur, L. Dunemann, and J. Begerow
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German ,Chemistry ,Biomonitoring ,language ,language.human_language ,Linguistics - Published
- 2012
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12. Iridium [Biomonitoring Methods, 2007]
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J. Begerow and L. Dunemann
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Detection limit ,Accuracy and precision ,Chromatography ,Specimen collection ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Biomonitoring ,Calibration ,Sample preparation ,Inductively coupled plasma ,Process engineering ,business ,Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry - Abstract
Published in the series Biomonitoring Methods, Vol. 11 (2007) The article contains sections titled: General principles Equipment, chemicals and solutions Equipment Chemicals Solutions Calibration standards Specimen collection and sample preparation Sample preparation Operational parameters Analytical determination Calibration Calculation of the analytical result Standardisation and quality control Evaluation of the method Precision Accuracy Detection limits Sources of error Discussion of the method Keywords: determination in urine; inductively coupled plasma sector field mass spectrometry; ICP-MS; analysis in biological materials; occupational monitoring; analytical method; biomarker; metabolites
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- 2012
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13. Iridium [Biomonitoring Methods in German language, 2008]
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L. Dunemann Prüfer: P. Schramel and J. Begerow
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German ,Chemistry ,Biomonitoring ,language ,language.human_language ,Linguistics - Published
- 2012
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14. Long-term mercury excretion in urine after removal of amalgam fillings
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J. Begerow, I. Freier, Lothar Dunemann, and D. Zander
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Adult ,Male ,MERCURE ,business.industry ,Urinary system ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Dentistry ,Mercury ,Urine ,Middle Aged ,MERCURY EXPOSURE ,Dental Amalgam ,Mercury (element) ,Excretion ,stomatognathic diseases ,stomatognathic system ,chemistry ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,business ,Demography ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The long-term urinary mercury excretion was determined in 17 28- to 55-year-old persons before and at varying times (up to 14 months) after removal of all (4-24) dental amalgam fillings. Before removal the urinary mercury excretion correlated with the number of amalgam fillings. In the immediate post-removal phase (up to 6 days after removal) a mean increase of 30% was observed. Within 12 months the geometric mean of the mercury excretion was reduced by a factor of 5 from 1.44 micrograms/g (range: 0.57-4.38 micrograms/g) to 0.36 microgram/g (range: 0.13-0.88 microgram/g). After cessation of exposure to dental amalgam the mean half-life was 95 days. These results show that the release of mercury from dental amalgam contributes predominantly to the mercury exposure of non-occupationally exposed persons. The exposure from amalgam fillings thus exceeds the exposure from food, air and beverages. Within 12 months after removal of all amalgam fillings the participants showed substantially lower urinary mercury levels which were comparable to those found in subjects who have never had dental amalgam fillings. A relationship between the urinary mercury excretion and adverse effects was not found. Differences in the frequency of effects between the pre- and the post-removal phase were not observed.
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- 1994
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15. Occupational chronic exposure to organic solvents
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G Lehnert, S Jekel, Juergen Angerer, E Lichterbeck, and J Begerow
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Adult ,Male ,Chronic exposure ,Varnish ,Air Pollutants, Occupational ,Urine ,Ethoxyethyl acetate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Risk Factors ,Ethoxyacetic acid ,Paint ,Humans ,Chromatography ,Xylene ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Occupational Diseases ,chemistry ,visual_art ,Toxicity ,Solvents ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Ethylene Glycols ,Female ,Solvent exposure ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Seventeen persons (2 women and 15 men), who were exposed to glycolethers in a varnish production plant, were examined according to their external and internal solvent exposure. The workers in the production plant (n = 12) were exposed to average concentrations of ethoxyethanol, ethoxyethyl acetate, butoxyethanol, 1-methoxypropanol-2, 2-methoxypropyl-1-acetate and xylene of 2.8; 2.7; 1.1; 7.0; 2.8 and 1.7 ppm. In the air of the store (n = 3) and in the laboratory (n = 2) only minor concentrations of xylene respectively xylene and ethoxyethyl acetate could be measured. Internal exposure was estimated by measuring butoxyethanol (BE) in blood as well as ethoxyacetic acid (EAA) and butoxyacetic acid (BAA) in urine samples. Urine samples were taken pre- and post-shift. As expected, the highest values were found in the varnish production. The average post shift concentrations of BE, EAA and BAA were 121.3 micrograms/l; 167.8 and 10.5 mg/l. The relatively high concentrations of EAA and BAA in pre-shift samples can be explained by the long half-lives of these metabolites. According to our findings most of the glycolethers were taken up through the skin. Comparing our results with those reported in the literature we think that a future tolerable limit value for the concentration of ethoxyacetic acid in urine should be in the order of 100 to 200 mg/l.
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- 1990
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16. Temporal variation of hydroxyl radical generation and 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine formation by coarse and fine particulate matter
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Wolfram Birmili, J Begerow, Roel P. F. Schins, Paul J. A. Borm, Tingming Shi, A M Knaapen, Gezondheidsrisico Analyse en Toxicologie, and RS: NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism
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Meteorological Concepts ,Analytical chemistry ,Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Thymus Gland ,law.invention ,Metal ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,law ,Animals ,Particle Size ,Electron paramagnetic resonance ,Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry ,Deoxyadenosines ,Hydroxyl Radical ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,8-Hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine ,DNA ,Copper ,Dose–response relationship ,Editorial ,chemistry ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Original Article ,Hydroxyl radical ,Cattle ,Particle size - Abstract
Temporal variation of hydroxyl radical generation and 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine formation by coarse and fine particulate matter.Shi T, Knaapen AM, Begerow J, Birmili W, Borm PJ, Schins RP.Institut fur umweltmedizinische Forschung (IUF) an der Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf gGmbH, Auf'm Hennekamp 50, D-40225 Dusseldorf, Germany.AIMS: To determine the induction of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) by fine (
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- 2003
17. Internal platinum and palladium exposure of the general population with emphasis on the exposure from automobile exhaust and dental restorative alloys
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L. Dunemann and J. Begerow
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education.field_of_study ,Materials science ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Population ,Metallurgy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Normal population ,Platinum ,education ,Rhodium ,Palladium ,Catalysis - Abstract
Since the introduction of catalytic converters for emission control in automobiles containing platinum (Pt), palladium (Pd), and rhodium (Rh) as effective components, efforts have been made to assess their impact on the environment and on man. Experiments on a test stand showed that Pt is emitted with the car exhaust as Pt(0) and Pt(IV) in the range of ng per kilometer of driving distance (Innacker and Malessa 1992; Konig et al. 1992; Schlogl et al. 1987). Pt concentrations of dust, soil, and grass collected in the vicinity of motorways were found to be elevated (Helmers et al. 1994; Hodge and Stallard 1986; Schierl and Fruhmann 1996, Zereini et al. 1993). The Pt accumulation in soil over the last years is also well documented (Helmers et al. 1994). Furthermore, Waber et al. (1996) showed that Pt concentrations in a standardized grass culture rise with increasing traffic density. So, there is evidence that Pt released from catalysts can be taken up by plants, enter the food chain and contribute to the internal exposure of the normal population.
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- 2000
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18. Anwendung der Sektorfeld-ICP-MS zur Bestimmung der Hintergrundbelastung der Bevölkerung mit Platinmetallen
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L. Dunemann and J. Begerow
- Abstract
Die Exposition des Menschen gegenuber Platinmetallen hat sich in den vergangenen Jahren kontinuierlich erhoht. Dabei kann der Mensch uber sehr unterschiedliche Pfade gegenuber diesen Fremdstoffen exponiert sein. Einen erheblichen Anteil zum Eintrag von Platinmetallen in die Umwelt liefert vor allem deren Freisetzung aus Autoabgaskatalysatoren. Ferner werden Platinmetalle in steigendem Umfang in der Zahnheilkunde in Edelmetall-Legierungen zur Versorgung mit Zahnersatz eingesetzt, aus denen sie nach Korrosion in den Speichel freigesetzt werden konnen (Sehwickerath u. Pfeiffer 1995; Begerow et al. 1998b, 1998c). Aufgrund ihrer breiten industriellen Anwendung als Katalysatoren sind sie auserdem als Ruckstande in den Endprodukten wie Medikamenten, Lebensmitteln und Gegenstanden des taglichen Gebrauchs enthalten. Aufgrund ihrer Verwendung als Wirkstoffe in Medikamenten (z.B. cis-Platin und Carboplatin in der Krebstherapie) gelangen sie zusatzlich uber Abwasser und Mull in die Umwelt.
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- 1999
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19. Determination of physiological levels of volatile organic compounds in blood using static headspace capillary gas chromatography with serial triple detection
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H J, Schroers, E, Jermann, J, Begerow, H, Hajimiragha, A M, Chiarotti-Omar, and L, Dunemann
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Detection limit ,Air Pollutants ,Chromatography ,Chromatography, Gas ,Detector ,Analytical chemistry ,Environmental Exposure ,Biochemistry ,Toluene ,Hydrocarbons ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electron capture detector ,Photoionization detector ,chemistry ,law ,Electrochemistry ,Calibration ,Environmental Chemistry ,Flame ionization detector ,Humans ,Benzene ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
A static capillary gas chromatographic method using three different detectors [photoionization detector (PID), electron capture detector (ECD) and flame ionization detector (FID)] switched in series is presented for the determination of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in sub microgram l-1 levels. The method was applied for the analysis of selected environmentally and occupationally relevant non-halogenated and chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., benzene, toluene, xylenes, dichlorobenzenes) as well as chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons (e.g., trichloroethene, tetrachloroethene) in blood samples. Detailed investigations, in respect to the figures of merit were carried out. For most of the selected VOCs detection limits (calculated as the three-fold standard deviation of low level calibration standards) in the range from 26 (benzene) to 67 ng l-1 (m/p-xylene) were achieved which are comparable with those reported for dynamic headspace techniques in combination with mass spectrometric detection. For the individual VOCs the within-series precision varied from 4 to 19% and the day-to-day precision from 11 to 28%. Regarding PID as well as FID the calibration graphs for all substances were linear up to at least 10 micrograms l-1 while the ECD response was linear up to concentrations of about 0.6 microgram l-1 for the halogenated compounds. Our method is applicable for the quantitative determination of VOCs in blood in the occupationally as well as in the physiologically relevant (normal) concentration range.
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- 1998
20. Internal and external tetrachloroethene exposure of persons living in differently polluted areas of Northrhine-Westphalia (Germany)
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J, Begerow, E, Jermann, T, Keles, I, Freier, U, Ranft, and L, Dunemann
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Male ,Air Pollutants ,Tetrachloroethylene ,Urban Population ,Environmental Exposure ,Middle Aged ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Child, Preschool ,Germany ,Solvents ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
An epidemiological study was performed to measure the internal and external tetrachloroethene exposure of persons living in two differently polluted areas of Northrhine-Westphalia (Germany). Tetrachloroethene concentrations were determined in venous blood samples of 5- to 7-year-old children (n = 81) and 55-year-old women (n = 91) living in Essen, an industrial city located in the Ruhr area. 103 children und 131 women of the same age living in Borken, a small town north of the Ruhr area, served as reference group. Outdoor air samples were collected on passive samplers (sampling period: 4 weeks) from 70 measurement points per study area (about 2 km2, mean distance 100 m). In the course of a year these measurements were repeated three times to cover seasonal variations. Parallel to the outdoor measurement periods, indoor air concentrations were determined in the homes of those women from Essen and Borken, who donored a blood sample. Tetrachloroethene levels in blood were generally low with a geometric mean of 0.05 microgram/L in women and 0.021 microgram/L in children. Nevertheless, children and women living in the industrial area were found to have significantly higher tetrachloroethene levels in blood than those of the reference group. In both study areas blood levels of women exceeded those of children by a factor of 2. Participants living in the neighbourhood of a dry-cleaning shop had distinctly elevated blood levels. The same applied to persons who stored dry-cleaned clothes at home. Like the internal exposure, external exposure was also higher in Essen than in Borken. In both areas tetrachloroethene concentrations indoors exceeded those outdoors. Outdoor tetrachloroethence concentrations were significantly increased during the cold season, while the opposite was true for indoor levels. The correlation between indoor and outdoor exposure was found to be significant, while those between blood levels and outdoor exposure became only significant when people living next to a dry-cleaning shop were excluded. No significant relationship was observed between blood and indoor tetrachlorethene levels. It is concluded that the higher tetrachloroethene blood levels of the urban population result from the higher atmospheric concentrations in industrial areas with tetrachloroethene emitting sources like metal and textile industry. The fact that indoor air tetrachloroethene levels exceeded those outdoors can only be explained by the presence of additional indoor sources. Provided that women spend on average more time indoors than children the higher indoor air concentrations may be the reason for the higher blood tetrachloroethene levels found in women. Persons living near a dry-cleaning shop or storing dry-cleaned clothes at home showed a higher internal and external exposure to tetrachloroethene than other persons. In individual cases it can by far exceed the average exposure of the general population, so that health impairments can not be generally excluded.
- Published
- 1996
21. Internal lead and cadmium exposure in 6-year-old children from western and eastern Germany
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Martina Turfeld, J. Begerow, Ursula Krämer, I. Freier, and Lothar Dunemann
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Male ,Veterinary medicine ,chemistry.chemical_element ,German ,Germany ,Deciduous teeth ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Cadmium ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental Exposure ,biology.organism_classification ,language.human_language ,CADMIUM EXPOSURE ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,El Niño ,Lead ,Tasa ,Distribution pattern ,language ,Blood lead level ,Female ,Tooth ,Demography - Abstract
Lead and cadmium levels in blood and deciduous teeth (shed incisors only) of 6-year-old German children were determined in 1991 in a large epidemiological study carried out in rural and urban areas of western Germany (Duisburg, Essen, Gelsenkirchen, Dortmund, Borken) and eastern Germany (Leipzig, Halle, Magdeburg, Osterburg, Gardelegen, Salzwedel). In total, blood lead and cadmium levels of 2311 German children and tooth lead and cadmium levels of 790 German children were analyzed. Blood lead levels were generally low in all study areas with geometric means between 39.3 μg/1 and 50.8 μg/l in the western German and between 42.3 μg/1 and 68.1 μg/l in the eastern German study areas. The mean blood lead level of Turkish children (n = 213) living in the western German study areas was 50.1 μg/l and thus 5.6 μg/1 higher than the overall geometric mean of the western German children. The higher exposure may be explained by a higher oral uptake from food and different living conditions. These children were excluded from multiple regression analysis because they were all living in the western study areas. The mean tooth lead levels ranged between 1.50 and 1.74 μg/g in the western and between 1.51 μg/g and 2.72 μg/g in the eastern study areas. Thus, they show a distribution pattern similar to blood. Blood and tooth lead levels were higher in urban than in rural areas and higher in the eastern German than in the western German study areas. With regard to the blood and tooth cadmium concentrations, no significant differences between the study areas could be found. The mean cadmium levels in blood ranged between 0.12 μg/1 and 0.14 μg/l and the mean tooth cadmium concentrations between 20.8 ng/g and 27.8 ng/g. Blood and tooth lead and cadmium levels of the eastern and western German children were thus mainly at a relatively low level in all rural and urban study areas. The study demonstrates and confirms that blood and tooth lead levels are influenced by several demographic, social, and environmental variables. The results indicate that there has been a further significant decrease of lead and cadmium exposure in western German children since our last epidemiological study carried out in the same study areas in 1985/1986.
- Published
- 1994
22. Bestimmung von Nickel in biologischem Material und umweltrelevanten Matrizes
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J. Angerer, J. Begerow, and R. Heinrich-Ramm
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Nickel wird in grosen Mengen hergestellt und zu einer Vielzahl industrieller Anwendungszwecke eingesetzt. An den Produktions- und Anwendungsorten sind viele Menschen diesem Metall beruflich ausgesetzt. Aus diesen Betrieben und andere anthropogene Quellen gelangt das Nickel auch in die allgemeine Umwelt des Menschen.
- Published
- 1991
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23. Determination of butoxyacetic acid in urine by capillary gas chromatography
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J. Angerer, J. Begerow, and R. Heinrich Ramm
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Detection limit ,Chromatography ,Elution ,Diazomethane ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Hydrochloric acid ,Ether ,General Medicine ,Analytical Chemistry ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,law ,Flame ionization detector ,General Materials Science ,Diethyl ether ,Ethylene glycol - Abstract
A simple, rapid and reliable method is presented for the determination of butoxyacetic acid (BAA), the main metabolite of ethylene glycol monobutyl ether (Butyl Cellosolve). The urine is acidified with hydrochloric acid and passed through a cation-exchange column. BAA which is quantitatively found in the filtrate is subsequently adsorbed on XAD-4 resin. After desorption with diethyl ether an aliquot of the eluate is evaporated in a nitrogen stream and methylated with diazomethane in diethyl ether. A forty-fold enrichment is achieved by this procedure. The gas-chromatographic separation is performed on a 60 m fused silica capillary column DB-1 (100% dimethyl-polysiloxane). Flame ionization is used for detection. Pentoxyacetic acid (PAA) serves as internal standard. The detection limit of BAA in urine is 0.02 mg/l. Linearity has been tested up to 50 mg/l. The losses by the clean-up steps are between 10.0% and 22.7%. The average recovery is 100.9%. Within-series imprecision (n=10) has been determined for three concentrations and ranges between 4.8% and 12.6%.
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- 1988
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24. Does airborne nickel exposure induce nickel sensitization?
- Author
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Mann E, Ranft U, Eberwein G, Gladtke D, Sugiri D, Behrendt H, Ring J, Schäfer T, Begerow J, Wittsiepe J, Krämer U, and Wilhelm M
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants urine, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Environmental Monitoring, Epidemiological Monitoring, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Male, Nickel urine, Risk Factors, Water analysis, Air Pollutants toxicity, Air Pollution, Dermatitis, Allergic Contact epidemiology, Dermatitis, Allergic Contact etiology, Environmental Exposure, Nickel toxicity
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Nickel is one of the most prevalent causes of contact allergy in the general population. This study focuses on human exposure to airborne nickel and its potential to induce allergic sensitization., Materials and Methods: The study group consisted of 309 children at school-starter age living in the West of Germany in the vicinity of two industrial sources and in a rural town without nearby point sources of nickel. An exposure assessment of nickel in ambient air was available for children in the Ruhr district using routinely monitored ambient air quality data and dispersion modelling. Internal nickel exposure was assessed by nickel concentrations in morning urine samples of the children., Results: The observed nickel sensitization prevalence rates varied between 12.6% and 30.7%. Statistically significant associations were showed between exposure to nickel in ambient air and urinary nickel concentration as well as between urinary nickel concentration and nickel sensitization. Furthermore, an elevated prevalence of nickel sensitization was associated with exposure to increased nickel concentrations in ambient air., Conclusion: The observed associations support the assumption that inhaled nickel in ambient air might be a risk factor for nickel sensitization; further studies in larger collectives are necessary.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Human biomonitoring of cadmium and lead exposure of child-mother pairs from Germany living in the vicinity of industrial sources (hot spot study NRW).
- Author
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Wilhelm M, Eberwein G, Hölzer J, Begerow J, Sugiri D, Gladtke D, and Ranft U
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mothers, Regression Analysis, Surveys and Questionnaires, Water Pollution, Air Pollution, Cadmium blood, Cadmium urine, Environmental Monitoring, Lead blood
- Abstract
Cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb) exposure of children and their mothers living in the vicinity of industrial sources (metal refining) was assessed by a cross-sectional study performed in 2000. Study areas were the highly industrialized city of Duisburg and a rural area of North Rhine Westphalia, Germany. Exposure to ambient air concentrations of Cd and Pb was calculated from a Lagrange dispersion model using data sets from ambient air quality measurements. Cd in blood and urine and Pb in blood were measured by AAS. Mean age (years) was 6.4 (range 5.5-7.7) for children (n = 238) and 36 (range 23-48) for mothers (n = 213). A total of 49% of the children were males. Factors suspected to influence metal levels in blood or urine were obtained by questionnaire. Individual ambient Cd and Pb levels according to the home address ranged from 0.5 ng/m3 (Cd) and 0.03 microg/m3 (Pb) (rural area) up to 31.2 ng/m3 (Cd) and 0.73 microg/m3 (Pb) (industrialized area). Cd levels (geometric mean) in blood (0.13 and 0.10 microg/L) and urine (both areas 0.09 microg/L) of children did not differ between the two areas. Cd levels in blood and urine of mothers from the industrialized area were higher (blood 0.39 microg/L, urine 0.28 microg/L) than in those from the rural area (blood 0.25 microg/L, urine 0.25 microg/L). Pb levels in the blood of children from the industrialized area were higher (31 microg/L) than in those from the rural area (21 microg/L). Pb levels in the blood of mothers did not differ between the two areas (both 24 microg/L). Pb levels in blood showed a significant association between child and mother (n = 192; r = 0.26, p < 0.001). This did not apply for Cd in blood or urine. Regression analysis clearly revealed that Pb levels in ambient air were associated with Pb in the blood of children. Minor associations were also found between Cd in air and Cd in the blood of mothers and between Cd in air and urine of mothers.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Temporal variation of hydroxyl radical generation and 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine formation by coarse and fine particulate matter.
- Author
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Shi T, Knaapen AM, Begerow J, Birmili W, Borm PJ, and Schins RP
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, DNA metabolism, Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic, Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy, Hydroxyl Radical metabolism, Meteorological Concepts, Particle Size, Thymus Gland metabolism, Deoxyadenosines metabolism, Hydroxyl Radical chemistry
- Abstract
Aims: To determine the induction of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) by fine (<2.5 microm) and coarse (10-2.5 microm) particulate matter (PM) sampled over time at one sampling location, and to relate the observed effects to the hydroxyl radical (*OH) generating activities and transition metal content of these samples, and to meteorological parameters., Methods: Weekly samples of coarse and fine PM were analysed for H(2)O(2) dependent *OH formation using electron spin resonance (ESR) and formation of 8-OHdG in calf thymus DNA using an immuno-dotblot assay. Immunocytochemistry was used to determine 8-OHdG formation in A549 human epithelial lung cells. To determine temporal effects, samples from six weeks in summer and six weeks in autumn/winter were compared using ESR and the dotblot assay. Concentrations of leachable V, Cr, Fe, Ni, and Cu were determined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry., Results: Both PM fractions elicited *OH generation as well as 8-OHdG formation in calf thymus DNA and in A549 cells. 8-OHdG formation in the naked DNA was significantly related to *OH generation, but not to metal concentrations except for copper. A significantly higher *OH generation was observed for coarse PM, but not fine PM collected during the autumn/winter season; this was not due to differences in sampled mass or metal content. Specific weather conditions under which increased *OH formation in the coarse mode was observed suggest that other, as yet unknown, anthropogenic components might affect the radical generating capacity of PM., Conclusions: Both coarse and fine PM are able to generate *OH, and induce formation of 8-OHdG. When considered at equal mass, *OH formation shows considerable variability with regard to the fraction of PM, as well as the sampling season. The toxicological implications of this heterogeneity in *OH formation by PM, as can be easily determined by ESR, need further investigation.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Dietary intake of platinum and gold by children from Germany using duplicate portion sampling.
- Author
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Wittsiepe J, Schrey P, Wilhelm M, Begerow J, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Body Weight, Child, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Child, Preschool, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Pollutants administration & dosage, Female, Food Analysis, Germany, Humans, Infant, Male, Diet, Eating, Food Contamination, Gold administration & dosage, Platinum administration & dosage
- Abstract
The dietary intake of platinum and gold by 84 small children, 42 boys and 42 girls at the age of 14 to 83 months, with different food consumption behaviour living in urban and rural areas of Germany was measured by the duplicate method with a seven day sampling period from May to September 1998. The levels in the food duplicates were in the range of < 0.01 to 450 ng Pt/kg (dry weight) (median: 22) and < 0.14 to 28 microg Au/kg (dry weight) (median: 0.645). Related to the body weight, Pt was in the range of < 0.81 to 32 ng/(kg (body weight) x week) (median: 2.3) and Au was < 0.015 to 2.6 microg/(kg (body weight) x week) (median: 0.068). Children consuming exclusively products from the super market showed slightly higher Pt concentrations in the food duplicates and a higher dietary intake per body weight than children with food consumption including products from the family owned vegetable gardens or the surrounding area and/or products from domestic animals of the surrounding area. No influence of the food consumption behaviour was found for the concentrations in the food duplicates or the dietary intake of Au.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Tolerance to nickel: oral nickel administration induces a high frequency of anergic T cells with persistent suppressor activity.
- Author
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Artik S, Haarhuis K, Wu X, Begerow J, and Gleichmann E
- Subjects
- Adjuvants, Immunologic pharmacology, Administration, Oral, Adoptive Transfer, Animals, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes transplantation, Cells, Cultured, Dermatitis, Allergic Contact drug therapy, Dermatitis, Allergic Contact metabolism, Female, Hydrogen Peroxide pharmacology, Injections, Intraperitoneal, Interleukin-2 biosynthesis, Kinetics, Lymph Nodes immunology, Lymphocyte Activation, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Nickel administration & dosage, Nickel pharmacokinetics, Spleen immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory transplantation, Clonal Anergy, Dermatitis, Allergic Contact immunology, Nickel pharmacology, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology
- Abstract
We adapted our mouse model of allergic contact hypersensitivity to nickel for the study of tolerance. Sensitization in this model is achieved by the administration of nickel ions with H(2)O(2); nickel ions alone are unable to prime naive T cells, but can restimulate primed ones. A 4-wk course of oral or i.p. administration of 10 mM NiCl(2) to naive mice induced tolerance, preventing the induction of hypersensitivity for at least 20 wk; long term desensitization of nickel-sensitized mice, however, required continuous NiCl(2) administration. When splenic T cells of orally tolerized donors, even after a treatment-free interval of 20 wk, were transferred to naive recipients, as with lymph node cells (LNC), they specifically prevented sensitization of the recipients. The LNC of such donors were anergic, because upon in vivo sensitization with NiCl(2) in H(2)O(2) and in vitro restimulation with NiCl(2), they failed to show the enhanced proliferation and IL-2 production as seen with LNC of mice not tolerized before sensitization. As few as 10(2) bulk T cells, consisting of both CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells, were able to specifically transfer tolerance to nickel. A hypothesis is provided to account for this extraordinarily high frequency of nickel-reactive, suppressive T cells; it takes into account that nickel ions fail to act as classical haptens, but form versatile, unstable metal-protein and metal-peptide complexes. Furthermore, a powerful amplification mechanism, such as infectious tolerance, must operate which allows but a few donor T cells to tolerize the recipient.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Renal and other organ failure caused by germanium intoxication.
- Author
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Lück BE, Mann H, Melzer H, Dunemann L, and Begerow J
- Subjects
- Germanium blood, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic blood, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Organ Failure blood, Osmolar Concentration, Germanium poisoning, Kidney Failure, Chronic chemically induced, Multiple Organ Failure chemically induced
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Determination of selected microbial volatile organic compounds by diffusive sampling and dual-column capillary GC-FID--a new feasible approach for the detection of an exposure to indoor mould fungi?
- Author
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Elke K, Begerow J, Oppermann H, Krämer U, Jermann E, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Child, Child Welfare, Chromatography, Gas, Humans, Incidence, Organic Chemicals analysis, Respiratory Tract Diseases epidemiology, Volatilization, Air Pollution, Indoor adverse effects, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Fungi, Respiratory Tract Diseases etiology
- Abstract
A new, analytically valid procedure is described to assess the exposure of human beings to the so-called microbial volatile organic compounds (MVOCs) in air. The method can be used routinely for large sample numbers and is especially valuable as a basis for further research on the correlation between single MVOCs and indoor mould growth. The procedure is based on the fact that fungi produce a variety of volatile organic compounds, such as 3-methylbutan-1-ol, 3-methylbutan-2-ol, fenchone, heptan-2-one, hexan-2-one, octan-3-one, octan-3-ol, pentan-2-ol, alpha-terpineol, and thujopsene, which they emit into the indoor environment. Using diffusive samplers, these MVOCs are adsorbed onto charcoal during a sampling interval of four weeks. The described method is thus superior to existing methods which use short-term active sampling. After desorption with carbon disulfide, the MVOCs were determined by dual-column gas chromatography with flame ionization detection using the large-volume injection technique for sample introduction. The detection limits ranged between 0.15 and 0.53 microgram m-3, within-series precision was found to range between 6.5 and 19.0%, and recovery was between 77 and 118%. The procedure has been successfully applied in the context of a large field study to measure the indoor MVOC exposure in children's rooms of 132 dwellings. The objective of the study was to examine the relation between indoor mould growth, the indoor MVOC exposure and the prevalence of adverse health effects. Information about mould formation has been obtained by a questionnaire and by the determination of colony forming units of mould fungi in mattress dust. With the exception of 3-methylbutan-2-ol, fenchone, nonan-2-one, octan-2-one, and thujopsene, indoor air concentrations of all MVOCs under investigation were significantly higher inside damp and mouldy dwellings. From the primary MVOCs under investigation, 3-methylbutan-1-ol, hexan-2-one, heptan-2-one, and octan-3-ol were found to be most reliable indicators for mould formation. A correlation was also found between selected MVOCs and the occurrence of mould species in mattress dust. Aspergillus sp. correlated with heptan-2-one, hexan-2-one, octan-3-ol, octan-3-one, and alpha-terpineol, while the occurrence of Eurotium sp. was correlated with higher indoor air concentrations of 3-methylbutan-1-ol, 3-methylbutan-2-ol, heptan-2-one, hexan-2-one, octan-3-ol, and thujopsene. Children living in dwellings with elevated MVOC levels had a higher prevalence of asthma, hay fever, wheezing, and irritations of the eyes. These positive associations persisted after controlling for confounding factors such as age, sex, body-mass index, number of siblings, social status, passive smoking, type of heating, and ventilation habits. However, they were not statistically significant. This lack of significance may be a result of the small number of investigated samples.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Internal platinum, palladium, and gold exposure in environmentally and occupationally exposed persons.
- Author
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Begerow J, Sensen U, Wiesmüller GA, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Dental Technicians, Dentures, Female, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Student Dropouts, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Vehicle Emissions adverse effects, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Gold urine, Occupational Exposure adverse effects, Palladium urine, Platinum urine
- Abstract
In a pilot study the urinary platinum (Pt), palladium (Pd), and gold (Au) excretion was analyzed in 27 dental technicians, 17 road construction workers and 17 school-leavers using sector field inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (SF-ICP-MS). Detection limits in urine were 0.24 ng/l for Pt and Au and 0.17 ng/l regarding Pd. A standardized questionnaire was used to assess information about kind and degree of contact to these metals, the physical condition of the volunteers and confounding factors. Significant differences between the three study groups were found. The mean Pt, Pd, and Au excretions of the dental technicians were significantly higher than those of the road construction workers and school-leavers. This indicates that the occupational treatment of dental alloys leads to an internal exposure to these metals which is distinctly higher than that from automobile exhaust exposure. Significant differences between Monday morning (pre-shift) and Thursday afternoon (post-shift) urine samples of the dental technicians were not found. The Pt excretion of road construction workers working near a much traveled highway was comparable with that of school-leavers being less (only environmentally) exposed to automobile exhaust. Regarding Pd and Au the road construction workers showed a tendency to higher levels in urine when compared with the school-leavers, but statistically significant differences were not found. The tendency to higher urinary Pd and Au levels in the road-construction workers may be explained by their slightly greater number of noble metal containing artificial dentures, which may cause an additional exposure. A statistically significant effect of age on the urinary noble metal excretion was not detectable.
- Published
- 1999
32. Long term urinary platinum, palladium, and gold excretion of patients after insertion of noble metal dental alloys.
- Author
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Begerow J
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate to which extent noble-metal dental alloys contribute to the total platinum (Pt), palladium (Pd), and gold (Au) body burden of the general population. The urinary Pt, Pd, and Au excretion was determined in three non-occupationally exposed volunteers before and up to 3 months after insertion of a highgold dentalalloy. The in-vitro release of Pt, Pd, and Au from four different types of dental alloys into either artificial saliva or 1% lactic acid solution was additionally investigated. The Pt, Pd, and Au concentrations were determined by sector field inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (SF-ICP-MS). Before insertion of the high-gold dental alloy, the Pt excretion of the patients ranged between 1.0 and 7.4 ng l-1 (0.6-3.3 ng g-1 creatinine). In the immediate post-insertion phase the Pt excretion rose to 10.5-59.6 ng l-1 (14.5-33.2 ng g-1 creatinine). This is a mean increase by a factor of 12 compared with the average Pt excretion before insertion. Three months after insertion, the Pt excretion was still elevated by a factor of 7. Contrary to Pt, the Au and Pd excretion in urine was not significantly increased after insertion of this type of high-gold dental alloy. Our in-vitro investigations confirm the assumption that Pt, Pd, and Au are released from noble metal containing dental alloys by corrosion. Under the applied conditions, the release was in the lower ng cm-2 range. It can be concluded that the Pt release from dental alloys can predominantly contribute to the Pt exposure of non-occupationally exposed persons. It can exceed the exposure from all other environmental sources including the Pt release from automobile exhaust catalysts.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Determination of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes in indoor air at environmental levels using diffusive samplers in combination with headspace solid-phase microextraction and high-resolution gas chromatography-flame ionization detection.
- Author
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Elke K, Jermann E, Begerow J, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Air Pollutants analysis, Carbon Disulfide, Charcoal, Environmental Monitoring, Indicators and Reagents, Methanol, Sensitivity and Specificity, Time Factors, Air Pollution, Indoor prevention & control, Benzene analysis, Benzene Derivatives analysis, Chromatography, Gas methods, Toluene analysis, Xylenes analysis
- Abstract
An improved analytical method for passive air sampling is presented based on a combination of commercially available diffusive samplers with headspace solid-phase microextraction and high-resolution gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (HRGC-FID). This procedure is targeted for short-term BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and o-, m- and p-xylenes) determinations at environmental concentrations and can be applied for sampling intervals between 30 min and 24 h. The analytes are adsorbed onto the charcoal pad of a passive sampler and then extracted with carbon disulphide-methanol. After removal of the carbon disulphide by xanthation, the BTEXs are enriched on a Carboxen SPME fiber, thermally desorbed and analysed by HRGC-FID. Detection limits for a sampling interval of 2 h are between 0.4 and 2 micrograms/m3, within-series precision ranges between 6.6 and 12.8%, day-to-day precision is between 11.1 and 15.2%. The results obtained with this procedure are validated by comparison with active sampling. Detection limits and a further reduction of the sampling time are limited by blanks of the chemicals and the diffusive samplers. Procedures to eliminate these blanks are described in detail. Applications such as the determination of BTEXs in indoor air inside buildings, inside a train and a car are presented, indicating the usefulness of the described procedure for short-term measurements of environmental BTEX concentrations. An advantage of passive samplers is the storage stability for at least six months, which is essential for its use in large epidemiological studies.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Determination of physiological levels of volatile organic compounds in blood using static headspace capillary gas chromatography with serial triple detection.
- Author
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Schroers HJ, Jermann E, Begerow J, Hajimiragha H, Chiarotti-Omar AM, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Gas instrumentation, Chromatography, Gas methods, Humans, Air Pollutants blood, Environmental Exposure, Hydrocarbons blood
- Abstract
A static capillary gas chromatographic method using three different detectors [photoionization detector (PID), electron capture detector (ECD) and flame ionization detector (FID)] switched in series is presented for the determination of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in sub microgram l-1 levels. The method was applied for the analysis of selected environmentally and occupationally relevant non-halogenated and chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., benzene, toluene, xylenes, dichlorobenzenes) as well as chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons (e.g., trichloroethene, tetrachloroethene) in blood samples. Detailed investigations, in respect to the figures of merit were carried out. For most of the selected VOCs detection limits (calculated as the three-fold standard deviation of low level calibration standards) in the range from 26 (benzene) to 67 ng l-1 (m/p-xylene) were achieved which are comparable with those reported for dynamic headspace techniques in combination with mass spectrometric detection. For the individual VOCs the within-series precision varied from 4 to 19% and the day-to-day precision from 11 to 28%. Regarding PID as well as FID the calibration graphs for all substances were linear up to at least 10 micrograms l-1 while the ECD response was linear up to concentrations of about 0.6 microgram l-1 for the halogenated compounds. Our method is applicable for the quantitative determination of VOCs in blood in the occupationally as well as in the physiologically relevant (normal) concentration range.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Determination of polychlorinated biphenyls and chlorinated pesticides in human body fluids and tissues.
- Author
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Bucholski KA, Begerow J, Winneke G, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Bone Marrow chemistry, Fetal Blood chemistry, Humans, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated blood, Pesticide Residues blood, Polychlorinated Biphenyls blood, Reproducibility of Results, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry methods, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated analysis, Pesticide Residues analysis, Polychlorinated Biphenyls analysis
- Abstract
A fast and reliable method for the determination of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and chlorinated pesticides in human body fluids and tissues is presented. Sample clean-up and selective enrichment of analytes are carried out by liquid column chromatography without a prior solvent extraction step. Analytes are determined either by high-resolution capillary gas chromatography with mass spectrometric detection, or by dual-column GC followed by electron-capture detection. A procedure is described for the simultaneous determination of environmental levels of the PCB congeners 28, 52, 101, 138, 153 and 180 in human cord serum. The method allows the simultaneous determination of chlorinated pesticides such as aldrin, DDT, DDE, BHC and HCB and is also applicable to other biological matrices, such as bone marrow or tissues.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Internal and external tetrachloroethene exposure of persons living in differently polluted areas of Northrhine-Westphalia (Germany).
- Author
-
Begerow J, Jermann E, Keles T, Freier I, Ranft U, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Air Pollutants analysis, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Environmental Exposure, Environmental Monitoring, Solvents analysis, Tetrachloroethylene analysis, Urban Population
- Abstract
An epidemiological study was performed to measure the internal and external tetrachloroethene exposure of persons living in two differently polluted areas of Northrhine-Westphalia (Germany). Tetrachloroethene concentrations were determined in venous blood samples of 5- to 7-year-old children (n = 81) and 55-year-old women (n = 91) living in Essen, an industrial city located in the Ruhr area. 103 children und 131 women of the same age living in Borken, a small town north of the Ruhr area, served as reference group. Outdoor air samples were collected on passive samplers (sampling period: 4 weeks) from 70 measurement points per study area (about 2 km2, mean distance 100 m). In the course of a year these measurements were repeated three times to cover seasonal variations. Parallel to the outdoor measurement periods, indoor air concentrations were determined in the homes of those women from Essen and Borken, who donored a blood sample. Tetrachloroethene levels in blood were generally low with a geometric mean of 0.05 microgram/L in women and 0.021 microgram/L in children. Nevertheless, children and women living in the industrial area were found to have significantly higher tetrachloroethene levels in blood than those of the reference group. In both study areas blood levels of women exceeded those of children by a factor of 2. Participants living in the neighbourhood of a dry-cleaning shop had distinctly elevated blood levels. The same applied to persons who stored dry-cleaned clothes at home. Like the internal exposure, external exposure was also higher in Essen than in Borken. In both areas tetrachloroethene concentrations indoors exceeded those outdoors. Outdoor tetrachloroethence concentrations were significantly increased during the cold season, while the opposite was true for indoor levels. The correlation between indoor and outdoor exposure was found to be significant, while those between blood levels and outdoor exposure became only significant when people living next to a dry-cleaning shop were excluded. No significant relationship was observed between blood and indoor tetrachlorethene levels. It is concluded that the higher tetrachloroethene blood levels of the urban population result from the higher atmospheric concentrations in industrial areas with tetrachloroethene emitting sources like metal and textile industry. The fact that indoor air tetrachloroethene levels exceeded those outdoors can only be explained by the presence of additional indoor sources. Provided that women spend on average more time indoors than children the higher indoor air concentrations may be the reason for the higher blood tetrachloroethene levels found in women. Persons living near a dry-cleaning shop or storing dry-cleaned clothes at home showed a higher internal and external exposure to tetrachloroethene than other persons. In individual cases it can by far exceed the average exposure of the general population, so that health impairments can not be generally excluded.
- Published
- 1996
37. Internal lead and cadmium exposure in 6-year-old children from western and eastern Germany.
- Author
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Begerow J, Freier I, Turfeld M, Krämer U, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Cadmium blood, Child, Female, Germany, Humans, Lead blood, Male, Cadmium analysis, Environmental Exposure, Lead analysis, Tooth chemistry
- Abstract
Lead and cadmium levels in blood and deciduous teeth (shed incisors only) of 6-year-old German children were determined in 1991 in a large epidemiological study carried out in rural and urban areas of western Germany (Duisburg, Essen, Gelsenkirchen, Dortmund, Borken) and eastern Germany (Leipzig, Halle, Magdeburg, Osterburg, Gardelelegen, Salzwedel). In total, blood lead and cadmium levels of 2311 German children and tooth lead and cadmium levels of 790 German children were analyzed. Blood lead levels were generally low in all study areas with geometric means between 39.3 micrograms/l and 50.8 micrograms/l in the western German and between 42.3 micrograms/l and 68.1 micrograms/l in the eastern German study areas. The mean blood lead level of Turkish children (n = 213) living in the western German study areas was 50.1 micrograms/l and thus 5.6 micrograms/l higher than the overall geometric mean of the western German children. The higher exposure may be explained by a higher oral uptake from food and different living conditions. These children were excluded from multiple regression analysis because they were all living in the western study areas. The mean tooth lead levels ranged between 1.50 and 1.74 micrograms/g in the western and between 1.51 micrograms/g and 2.72 micrograms/g in the eastern study areas. Thus, they show a distribution pattern similar to blood. Blood and tooth lead levels were higher in urban than in rural areas and higher in the eastern German than in the western German study areas. With regard to the blood and tooth cadmium concentrations, no significant differences between the study areas could be found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Long-term mercury excretion in urine after removal of amalgam fillings.
- Author
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Begerow J, Zander D, Freier I, and Dunemann L
- Subjects
- Adult, Demography, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Dental Amalgam metabolism, Mercury urine
- Abstract
The long-term urinary mercury excretion was determined in 17 28- to 55-year-old persons before and at varying times (up to 14 months) after removal of all (4-24) dental amalgam fillings. Before removal the urinary mercury excretion correlated with the number of amalgam fillings. In the immediate post-removal phase (up to 6 days after removal) a mean increase of 30% was observed. Within 12 months the geometric mean of the mercury excretion was reduced by a factor of 5 from 1.44 micrograms/g (range: 0.57-4.38 micrograms/g) to 0.36 microgram/g (range: 0.13-0.88 microgram/g). After cessation of exposure to dental amalgam the mean half-life was 95 days. These results show that the release of mercury from dental amalgam contributes predominantly to the mercury exposure of non-occupationally exposed persons. The exposure from amalgam fillings thus exceeds the exposure from food, air and beverages. Within 12 months after removal of all amalgam fillings the participants showed substantially lower urinary mercury levels which were comparable to those found in subjects who have never had dental amalgam fillings. A relationship between the urinary mercury excretion and adverse effects was not found. Differences in the frequency of effects between the pre- and the post-removal phase were not observed.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Occupational chronic exposure to organic solvents. XIII. Glycolether exposure during the production of varnishes.
- Author
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Angerer J, Lichterbeck E, Begerow J, Jekel S, and Lehnert G
- Subjects
- Adult, Environmental Monitoring methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Air Pollutants, Occupational adverse effects, Ethylene Glycols adverse effects, Occupational Diseases chemically induced, Paint adverse effects, Solvents adverse effects
- Abstract
Seventeen persons (2 women and 15 men), who were exposed to glycolethers in a varnish production plant, were examined according to their external and internal solvent exposure. The workers in the production plant (n = 12) were exposed to average concentrations of ethoxyethanol, ethoxyethyl acetate, butoxyethanol, 1-methoxypropanol-2, 2-methoxypropyl-1-acetate and xylene of 2.8; 2.7; 1.1; 7.0; 2.8 and 1.7 ppm. In the air of the store (n = 3) and in the laboratory (n = 2) only minor concentrations of xylene respectively xylene and ethoxyethyl acetate could be measured. Internal exposure was estimated by measuring butoxyethanol (BE) in blood as well as ethoxyacetic acid (EAA) and butoxyacetic acid (BAA) in urine samples. Urine samples were taken pre- and post-shift. As expected, the highest values were found in the varnish production. The average post shift concentrations of BE, EAA and BAA were 121.3 micrograms/l; 167.8 and 10.5 mg/l. The relatively high concentrations of EAA and BAA in pre-shift samples can be explained by the long half-lives of these metabolites. According to our findings most of the glycolethers were taken up through the skin. Comparing our results with those reported in the literature we think that a future tolerable limit value for the concentration of ethoxyacetic acid in urine should be in the order of 100 to 200 mg/l.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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