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  1. Although some studies mainly from Taiwan, Bangladesh and the United States, have suggested a consistent dose–response increase in the prevalence of hypertension with increasing arsenic exposure, the associatio...

    Authors: Xin Li, Bing Li, Shuhua Xi, Quanmei Zheng, Da Wang and Guifan Sun
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:37
  2. Fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (FENO) is a promising non-invasive index of airway inflammation that may be used to assess respiratory effects of air pollution. We evaluated FENO as a measure of airway inflam...

    Authors: Stefan Barath, Nicholas L Mills, Ellinor Ädelroth, Anna-Carin Olin and Anders Blomberg
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:36
  3. Immune suppression may be a critical effect associated with exposure to perfluorinated compounds (PFCs), as indicated by recent data on vaccine antibody responses in children. Therefore, this information may b...

    Authors: Philippe Grandjean and Esben Budtz-Jørgensen
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:35
  4. Exposure to air pollution has been demonstrated to increase the risk of preterm birth and low birth weight (LBW). Although evidence has accumulated on characteristics associated with increased risk of air poll...

    Authors: Takashi Yorifuji, Hiroo Naruse, Saori Kashima, Soshi Takao, Takeshi Murakoshi, Hiroyuki Doi and Ichiro Kawachi
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:34
  5. There is now compelling evidence that epigenetic modifications link adult disease susceptibility to environmental exposures during specific life stages, including pre-pubertal development. Animal studies indic...

    Authors: Jung H Kim, Laura S Rozek, Amr S Soliman, Maureen A Sartor, Ahmed Hablas, Ibrahim A Seifeldin, Justin A Colacino, Caren Weinhouse, Muna S Nahar and Dana C Dolinoy
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:33
  6. During September 2009, a large dust storm was experienced in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Extremely high levels of particulate matter were recorded, with daily average levels of coarse matter (<10 μm) p...

    Authors: Alistair Merrifield, Suzanne Schindeler, Bin Jalaludin and Wayne Smith
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:32
  7. With increasing numbers and quantities of chemicals in commerce and use, scientific attention continues to focus on the environmental and public health consequences of chemical production processes and exposur...

    Authors: Paul A Schulte, Lauralynn T McKernan, Donna S Heidel, Andrea H Okun, Gary Scott Dotson, Thomas J Lentz, Charles L Geraci, Pamela E Heckel and Christine M Branche
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:31
  8. Over exposure to manganese (Mn) can damage the human central nervous system and potentially cause liver toxicity. Alcohol drinking is also one of the well-known harmful factors to hepatic organism. The interac...

    Authors: Qi Deng, Jing Liu, Qing Li, Kangcheng Chen, Zhenfang Liu, Yuefei Shen, Piye Niu, Yiping Yang, Yunfeng Zou and Xiaobo Yang
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:30
  9. Bicycle commuting in an urban environment of high air pollution is known to be a potential health risk, especially for susceptible individuals. While risk management strategies aimed to reduce exposure to moto...

    Authors: Tom Cole-Hunter, Rohan Jayaratne, Ian Stewart, Matthew Hadaway, Lidia Morawska and Colin Solomon
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:29
  10. Air pollution exposure is associated with hospital admissions and emergency room visits for cardiopulmonary disease and stroke. Iceland’s capital area, Reykjavik, has generally low air pollution levels, but tr...

    Authors: Hanne Krage Carlsen, Bertil Forsberg, Kadri Meister, Thorarinn Gíslason and Anna Oudin
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:28
  11. Heatwaves are associated with significant health risks particularly among vulnerable groups. To minimize these risks, heat warning systems have been implemented. The question therefore is how effective these s...

    Authors: Ghasem (Sam) Toloo, Gerard FitzGerald, Peter Aitken, Kenneth Verrall and Shilu Tong
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:27
  12. Congenital heart disease (CHD) is one of the most prevalent birth defects. Housing renovations are a newly recognized source of indoor environmental pollution that is detrimental to health. A growing body of r...

    Authors: Zhen Liu, Xiaohong Li, Nana Li, Shengli Li, Kui Deng, Yuan Lin, Xinlin Chen, Fengzhi You, Jun Li, Dezhi Mu, Yanping Wang and Jun Zhu
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:25
  13. Few studies have supported an association between breast cancer and DDT, usually assessed with biomarkers that cannot discern timing of exposure, or differentiate between the accumulation of chronic low-dose v...

    Authors: Alexandra J White, Susan L Teitelbaum, Mary S Wolff, Steven D Stellman, Alfred I Neugut and Marilie D Gammon
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:24
  14. Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are a class of brominated flame retardants commonly used in a wide range of products. Prenatal exposure to PBDEs has been associated with adverse neurodevelopment. Our ob...

    Authors: Megan K Horton, Sabine Bousleiman, Richard Jones, Andreas Sjodin, Xinhua Liu, Robin Whyatt, Ronald Wapner and Pam Factor-Litvak
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:23
  15. Cadmium (Cd) can cause renal damage and osteoporosis after high-level exposure. Recently such effects, including increased urinary excretion of calcium, have been shown also at low-level exposure, as measured ...

    Authors: Maria Wallin, Gerd Sallsten, Elisabeth Fabricius-Lagging, Christian Öhrn, Thomas Lundh and Lars Barregard
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:22
  16. Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a systems-based method used to determine potential impacts to the environment associated with a product throughout its life cycle. Conclusions from LCA studies can be applied to ...

    Authors: Kelly A Scanlon, George M Gray, Royce A Francis, Shannon M Lloyd and Peter LaPuma
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:21
  17. Residence near municipal solid waste incinerators, a major historical source of dioxin emissions, has been associated with increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) in European studies. The aim of our study...

    Authors: Anjoeka Pronk, John R Nuckols, Anneclaire J De Roos, Matthew Airola, Joanne S Colt, James R Cerhan, Lindsay Morton, Wendy Cozen, Richard Severson, Aaron Blair, David Cleverly and Mary H Ward
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:20

    The Correction to this article has been published in Environmental Health 2021 20:113

  18. Aromatic hydrocarbons emitted from gasoline-powered vehicles contribute to the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA), which increases the atmospheric mass concentration of fine particles (PM2.5). Here we e...

    Authors: Katherine von Stackelberg, Jonathan Buonocore, Prakash V Bhave and Joel A Schwartz
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:19
  19. Exposure to air pollution is frequently associated with reductions in birth weight but results of available studies vary widely, possibly in part because of differences in air pollution metrics. Further insigh...

    Authors: Olivier Laurent, Jun Wu, Lianfa Li, Judith Chung and Scott Bartell
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:18
  20. Flame retardant chemicals are used in materials on airplanes to slow the propagation of fire. These chemicals migrate from their source products and can be found in the dust of airplanes, creating the potentia...

    Authors: Joseph G Allen, Heather M Stapleton, Jose Vallarino, Eileen McNeely, Michael D McClean, Stuart J Harrad, Cassandra B Rauert and John D Spengler
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:17
  21. Previous studies found effect modification of associations between traffic-related air pollution and cardiovascular outcomes by polymorphisms in the hemochromatosis gene (HFE). As traffic-related air pollution...

    Authors: Melinda C Power, Marc G Weisskopf, Stacey E Alexeeff, Robert O Wright, Brent A Coull, Avron Spiro III and Joel Schwartz
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:16
  22. Tools for estimating population exposures to environmental carcinogens are required to support evidence-based policies to reduce chronic exposures and associated cancers. Our objective was to develop indicator...

    Authors: Eleanor Setton, Perry Hystad, Karla Poplawski, Roslyn Cheasley, Alejandro Cervantes-Larios, C Peter Keller and Paul A Demers
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:15
  23. A travel mode shift to active transportation such as bicycling would help reduce traffic volume and related air pollution emissions as well as promote increased physical activity level. Cyclists, however, are ...

    Authors: Sarah Jarjour, Michael Jerrett, Dane Westerdahl, Audrey de Nazelle, Cooper Hanning, Laura Daly, Jonah Lipsitt and John Balmes
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:14
  24. Low-level environmental cadmium exposure and neurotoxicity has not been well studied in adults. Our goal was to evaluate associations between neurocognitive exam scores and a biomarker of cumulative cadmium ex...

    Authors: Timothy Ciesielski, David C Bellinger, Joel Schwartz, Russ Hauser and Robert O Wright
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:13
  25. Hot and cold temperatures have been associated with childhood asthma. However, the relationship between daily temperature variation and childhood asthma is not well understood. This study aimed to examine the ...

    Authors: Zhiwei Xu, Cunrui Huang, Hong Su, Lyle R Turner, Zhen Qiao and Shilu Tong
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:12
  26. Several studies have evaluated the association between forest fire smoke and acute exacerbations of respiratory diseases, but few have examined effects on pharmaceutical dispensations. We examine the associati...

    Authors: Catherine T Elliott, Sarah B Henderson and Victoria Wan
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:11
  27. Use of mobile phones has rapidly risen among adolescents despite a lack of scientific certainty on their health risks. Risk perception is an important determinant of behavior, and studies on adolescents’ risk ...

    Authors: Hur Hassoy, Raika Durusoy and Ali Osman Karababa
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:10
  28. Cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), and mercury (Hg) cause toxicological renal effects, but the clinical relevance at low-level exposures in general populations is unclear. The objective of this study is to assess the ri...

    Authors: Johan Nilsson Sommar, Maria K Svensson, Bodil M Björ, Sölve I Elmståhl, Göran Hallmans, Thomas Lundh, Staffan MI Schön, Staffan Skerfving and Ingvar A Bergdahl
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:9
  29. Environmental exposures during pregnancy and early life may have adverse health effects. Single birth cohort studies often lack statistical power to tease out such effects reliably. To improve the use of exist...

    Authors: Ulrike Gehring, Maribel Casas, Bert Brunekreef, Anna Bergström, Jens Peter Bonde, Jérémie Botton, Cecile Chévrier, Sylvaine Cordier, Joachim Heinrich, Cynthia Hohmann, Thomas Keil, Jordi Sunyer, Christina G Tischer, Gunnar Toft, Magnus Wickman, Martine Vrijheid…
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:8
  30. While air pollution exposures have been linked to cardiovascular outcomes, the contribution from acute gas and particle traffic-related pollutants remains unclear. Using a panel study design with repeated meas...

    Authors: Kyra Naumoff Shields, Jennifer M Cavallari, Megan J Olson Hunt, Mariana Lazo, Mario Molina, Luisa Molina and Fernando Holguin
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:7
  31. Various epidemiological studies have suggested associations between environmental exposures and pregnancy outcomes. Some studies have tempted to combine information from various epidemiological studies using m...

    Authors: Mark J Nieuwenhuijsen, Payam Dadvand, James Grellier, David Martinez and Martine Vrijheid
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:6
  32. Cellphone and cordless phone use is very prevalent among early adolescents, but the extent and types of use is not well documented. This paper explores how, and to what extent, New Zealand adolescents are typi...

    Authors: Mary Redmayne
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:5
  33. Over the past two decades, 12 large epidemiologic studies and 2 registries have focused on U.S. veterans of the 1990–1991 Gulf War Era. We conducted a review of these studies’ research tools to identify existi...

    Authors: Rebecca B McNeil, Catherine M Thomas, Steven S Coughlin, Elizabeth Hauser, Grant D Huang, Karen M Goldstein, Marcus R Johnson, Tyra Dunn-Thomas and Dawn T Provenzale
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:4
  34. Due to global mercury pollution and the adverse health effects of prenatal exposure to methylmercury (MeHg), an assessment of the economic benefits of prevented developmental neurotoxicity is necessary for any...

    Authors: Martine Bellanger, Céline Pichery, Dominique Aerts, Marika Berglund, Argelia Castaño, Mája ÄŒejchanová, Pierre Crettaz, Fred Davidson, Marta Esteban, Marc E Fischer, Anca Elena Gurzau, Katarina Halzlova, Andromachi Katsonouri, Lisbeth E Knudsen, Marike Kolossa-Gehring, Gudrun Koppen…
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:3
  35. Bronchial asthma is one of the most prevalent diseases in Arab children. Environmental pollution has been suggested to be considered causative of asthma, nasal symptoms and bronchitis in both children and adul...

    Authors: Nasser M Al-Daghri, Majed S Alokail, Sherif H Abd-Alrahman, Hossam M Draz, Sobhy M Yakout and Mario Clerici
    Citation: Environmental Health 2013 12:1
  36. Both nurture (environmental) and nature (genetic factors) play an important role in human disease etiology. Traditionally, these effects have been thought of as independent. This perspective is ill informed fo...

    Authors: Chen-yu Liu, Arnab Maity, Xihong Lin, Robert O Wright and David C Christiani
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:93
  37. Breast milk is the best source of nutrition for the newborn infant. However, since all infants cannot be breast-fed, there is a need for background data for setting adequate daily intakes. Previously, concentr...

    Authors: Karin Ljung Björklund, Marie Vahter, Brita Palm, Margaretha Grandér, Sanna Lignell and Marika Berglund
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:92
  38. Air pollution is associated with asthma exacerbations. We examined the associations of exposure to ambient particulate matter (PM10) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) with the risk of wheezing in preschool children, and...

    Authors: Agnes MM Sonnenschein-van der Voort, Yvonne de Kluizenaar, Vincent WV Jaddoe, Carmelo Gabriele, Hein Raat, Henriëtte A Moll, Albert Hofman, Frank H Pierik, Henk ME Miedema, Johan C de Jongste and Liesbeth Duijts
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:91
  39. In animals, anogenital distance (AGD) at birth reflects androgen levels during pregnancy and predicts adult AGD. Little is known about AGD in relation to female reproductive characteristics in humans, a questi...

    Authors: Jaime Mendiola, Manuela Roca, Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón, Maria-Pilar Mira-Escolano, José J López-Espín, Emily S Barrett, Shanna H Swan and Alberto M Torres-Cantero
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:90
  40. The cause of lung cancer is generally attributed to tobacco smoking. However lung cancer in never smokers accounts for 10 to 25% of all lung cancer cases. Arsenic, asbestos and radon are three prominent non-to...

    Authors: Roland Hubaux, Daiana D Becker-Santos, Katey SS Enfield, Stephen Lam, Wan L Lam and Victor D Martinez
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:89
  41. Although Integrated Environmental Health Monitoring (IEHM) is considered an essential tool to better understand complex environmental health issues, there is no consensus on how to develop such a programme. We...

    Authors: Hai-Ying Liu, Alena Bartonova, Mathilde Pascal, Roel Smolders, Erik Skjetne and Maria Dusinska
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:88
  42. Endocrine disrupting chemicals and carcinogens, some of which may not yet have been classified as such, are present in many occupational environments and could increase breast cancer risk. Prior research has i...

    Authors: James T Brophy, Margaret M Keith, Andrew Watterson, Robert Park, Michael Gilbertson, Eleanor Maticka-Tyndale, Matthias Beck, Hakam Abu-Zahra, Kenneth Schneider, Abraham Reinhartz, Robert DeMatteo and Isaac Luginaah
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:87
  43. Animal and in vitro studies demonstrated a neurotoxic potential of brominated flame retardants, a group of chemicals used in many household and commercial products to prevent fire. Although the first reports o...

    Authors: Michał Kiciński, Mineke K Viaene, Elly Den Hond, Greet Schoeters, Adrian Covaci, Alin C Dirtu, Vera Nelen, Liesbeth Bruckers, Kim Croes, Isabelle Sioen, Willy Baeyens, Nicolas Van Larebeke and Tim S Nawrot
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:86
  44. Few studies of environmental justice examine inequities in drinking water contamination. Those studies that have done so usually analyze either disparities in exposure/harm or inequitable implementation of enviro...

    Authors: Carolina L Balazs, Rachel Morello-Frosch, Alan E Hubbard and Isha Ray
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:84
  45. In the absence of current cumulative dietary exposure assessments, this analysis was conducted to estimate exposure to multiple dietary contaminants for children, who are more vulnerable to toxic exposure than...

    Authors: Rainbow Vogt, Deborah Bennett, Diana Cassady, Joshua Frost, Beate Ritz and Irva Hertz-Picciotto
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:83
  46. The health effects of particulate air pollution are widely recognized and there is some evidence that the magnitude of these effects vary by particle component. We studied the effects of ambient fine particles...

    Authors: Ana Valdés, Antonella Zanobetti, Jaana I Halonen, Luis Cifuentes, Diego Morata and Joel Schwartz
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:82
  47. The causes of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) remain largely unknown and widely debated; however, evidence increasingly points to the importance of environmental exposures. A growing number of studies use geog...

    Authors: Kate Hoffman, Amy E Kalkbrenner, Veronica M Vieira and Julie L Daniels
    Citation: Environmental Health 2012 11:80

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