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Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.

Methyl parathion (MP) is an organophosphate pesticide illegally applied to the interiors of many hundreds of homes throughout the United States by unlicensed pesticide applicators. Public health authorities developed a protocol for investigating contaminated homes and classifying their need for publ...

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Autores principales: Hryhorczuk, Daniel O, Moomey, Mike, Burton, Ann, Runkle, Ken, Chen, Edwin, Saxer, Tiffanie, Slightom, Jennifer, Dimos, John, McCann, Ken, Barr, Dana
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12634137
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author Hryhorczuk, Daniel O
Moomey, Mike
Burton, Ann
Runkle, Ken
Chen, Edwin
Saxer, Tiffanie
Slightom, Jennifer
Dimos, John
McCann, Ken
Barr, Dana
author_facet Hryhorczuk, Daniel O
Moomey, Mike
Burton, Ann
Runkle, Ken
Chen, Edwin
Saxer, Tiffanie
Slightom, Jennifer
Dimos, John
McCann, Ken
Barr, Dana
author_sort Hryhorczuk, Daniel O
collection PubMed
description Methyl parathion (MP) is an organophosphate pesticide illegally applied to the interiors of many hundreds of homes throughout the United States by unlicensed pesticide applicators. Public health authorities developed a protocol for investigating contaminated homes and classifying their need for public health interventions. This protocol included environmental screening for MP contamination and 1-day biomonitoring (a.m. and p.m. spot urine samples) of household members for p-nitrophenol (PNP), a metabolite of MP. The variability of urinary PNP excretion under these exposure conditions was unknown. We collected a.m. and p.m. spot urine samples for 7 consecutive days from 75 individuals, who were members of 20 MP-contaminated households in the greater Chicago, Illinois, area, and analyzed them for PNP. We also assessed the ability of the 1-day sampling protocol to correctly classify exposed individuals and households according to their need for public health interventions, assuming that 1 week of sampling (14 urinary PNPs) represented their true exposure condition. The coefficient of variation of log urinary PNPs for individuals over the course of 7 days of a.m. and p.m. sampling averaged about 15%. Adjusting for urinary excretion of creatinine improved reproducibility of urinary PNPs among children but not among adults. The 1-day protocol correctly classified true risk category in 92% of individuals and 85% of households. The data contained in this study can be used to refine what is already a reasonable and effective approach to identifying MP-exposed households and determining the appropriate public health intervention.
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spelling pubmed-12412902005-11-08 Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion. Hryhorczuk, Daniel O Moomey, Mike Burton, Ann Runkle, Ken Chen, Edwin Saxer, Tiffanie Slightom, Jennifer Dimos, John McCann, Ken Barr, Dana Environ Health Perspect Research Article Methyl parathion (MP) is an organophosphate pesticide illegally applied to the interiors of many hundreds of homes throughout the United States by unlicensed pesticide applicators. Public health authorities developed a protocol for investigating contaminated homes and classifying their need for public health interventions. This protocol included environmental screening for MP contamination and 1-day biomonitoring (a.m. and p.m. spot urine samples) of household members for p-nitrophenol (PNP), a metabolite of MP. The variability of urinary PNP excretion under these exposure conditions was unknown. We collected a.m. and p.m. spot urine samples for 7 consecutive days from 75 individuals, who were members of 20 MP-contaminated households in the greater Chicago, Illinois, area, and analyzed them for PNP. We also assessed the ability of the 1-day sampling protocol to correctly classify exposed individuals and households according to their need for public health interventions, assuming that 1 week of sampling (14 urinary PNPs) represented their true exposure condition. The coefficient of variation of log urinary PNPs for individuals over the course of 7 days of a.m. and p.m. sampling averaged about 15%. Adjusting for urinary excretion of creatinine improved reproducibility of urinary PNPs among children but not among adults. The 1-day protocol correctly classified true risk category in 92% of individuals and 85% of households. The data contained in this study can be used to refine what is already a reasonable and effective approach to identifying MP-exposed households and determining the appropriate public health intervention. 2002-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1241290/ /pubmed/12634137 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Hryhorczuk, Daniel O
Moomey, Mike
Burton, Ann
Runkle, Ken
Chen, Edwin
Saxer, Tiffanie
Slightom, Jennifer
Dimos, John
McCann, Ken
Barr, Dana
Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
title Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
title_full Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
title_fullStr Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
title_full_unstemmed Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
title_short Urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
title_sort urinary p-nitrophenol as a biomarker of household exposure to methyl parathion.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12634137
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