1.Association of iron status and food intake with blood heavy metal concentrations in Korean adolescent girls and women: Based on the 2010~2011 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
Jiyoung KIM ; Minseo SHIN ; Sunghee KIM ; Jihyun SEO ; Hyesun MA ; Yoon Jung YANG
Journal of Nutrition and Health 2017;50(4):350-360
PURPOSE: This study examined and compared the associations of the iron status and food intake with the blood lead, mercury, and cadmium concentrations among Korean adolescent girls, premenopausal women, and postmenopausal women. METHODS: The data from the 2010~2011 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) was used. The subjects were classified into three groups: adolescent girls (n = 268), premenopausal women (n = 1,157), and postmenopausal women (n = 446). The iron status was assessed by hemoglobin, hematocrit, serum ferritin, and iron concentrations, as well as the total iron binding capacity (TIBC). The food intake was estimated by a food frequency questionnaire. RESULTS: The blood heavy metal concentrations and poisoning rate in postmenopausal women were higher than in the other groups. The iron status in the adolescent girls and postmenopausal women was higher than that in the premenopausal women. In the adolescent girls, the iron status was inversely associated with the blood cadmium concentration. The dairy food intake was inversely related to the blood lead and cadmium concentrations. In premenopausal women, the iron status was inversely associated with the cadmium concentrations. The fish and shellfish food intakes were positively associated with the mercury concentrations. In postmenopausal women, the iron status was positively associated with the mercury and cadmium concentrations. Fast foods and fried foods were inversely associated with the lead concentration. CONCLUSION: The premenopausal women showed a lower iron status than the adolescent girls and postmenopausal women. The associations of the iron status with the blood heavy metal concentrations were different among the adolescent girls, premenopausal women, and postmenopausal women. In addition, the relationships of the food intakes with the blood heavy metal concentrations differed among adolescent girls, premenopausal women, and postmenopausal women. Further studies will be needed to confirm these findings.
Adolescent*
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Cadmium
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Eating*
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Fast Foods
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Female*
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Ferritins
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Hematocrit
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Humans
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Iron*
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Korea*
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Nutrition Surveys*
;
Poisoning
;
Shellfish
2.Risk assessment indexes for shellfish poisoning outbreak caused by red tide.
Shengxu YANG ; Jingjiao WEI ; Fan HE
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2018;47(2):111-117
OBJECTIVETo establish the indexes and weights of risk assessment of shellfish poisoning outbreak caused by red tide.
METHODSThe risk assessment indexes were developed with the methods of literature review, brainstorm and expert consultation, and the weights of indexes were calculated by the method of analytic hierarchy process. The established indexes contained the risk possibility, impacts of public health, population vulnerability and resilience. The relative risk indexes(integrated risk indexes) of different shellfish poisoning were computed by combining hierarchy process and TOPSIS methods. Moreover, the weights of indexes were further used to generate absolute risk values by multiplying indexes.
RESULTSFour primary indexes and 17 secondary indexes were identified for risk assessment of shellfish poisoning outbreak. Of 17 secondary indexes, the knowing rate of shellfish poisoning, medical accessibility, the number of people being affected, laboratory testing capacity and the habits of eating seafood of local residents had relatively large weights (0.0876, 0.0840, 0.0716, 0.0703 and 0.0644, respectively), which accounted for nearly 38% of the total weight. All consistency ratio (CR) were less than 0.1. The index system was applied in Cangnan county of Zhejiang province. The results showed the relative risk indexes of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP), diarrhetic shellfish poisoning (DSP), neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP) and amnesic shellfish poisoning (ASP) were 0.4526, 0.7116, 0.1657 and 0.2884, and the absolute risk values were 0.2542, 0.2668, 0.1907 and 0.2184, respectively. The risk orders of the 4 kinds of shellfish poisoning sorted by relative risk indexes and absolute risk values were consistent.
CONCLUSIONSThe indexes and weights of risk assessment of shellfish poisoning outbreak caused by red tide are established, which can provide scientific advice for prevention and control of shellfish poisoning outbreak.
Animals ; Disease Outbreaks ; Harmful Algal Bloom ; Humans ; Marine Toxins ; Risk Assessment ; Seafood ; Shellfish Poisoning
3.Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning by Saxitoxin: Two case reports.
Sang Cheon CHOI ; Jong Seok PARK ; Yoon Seok JUNG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2001;12(4):518-522
Paralytic shellfish poisoning results from consumption of mollusks that have fed on dinoflagellates capable of producing neurotoxins such as saxitoxin. The saxitoxin is concentrated in the shellfish and acts by decreasing sodium-channel permeability, thereby blocking neuronal transmission in skeletal muscles. Symptoms including paresthesia, perioral numbness, perioral tingling, nausea, vomiting, extremity numbness, extremity tingling, dizziness, ataxia, dysphagia, and weakness have been reported. In serious cases, respiratory hold may occur up to 6~24 hours after ingestion. Generally, the treatment for paralytic shellfish poisoning is supportive care, but mechanical ventilation is needed in serious cases acompanied by respiratory hold. We experienced two cases of paralytic shellfish poisoning. Respiratory hold was presented in one case and only mild paresthesia in the other case. After supportive management, including mechanical ventilation in former case, both patients were discharged without sequalae.
Ataxia
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Deglutition Disorders
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Dinoflagellida
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Dizziness
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Eating
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Extremities
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Humans
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Hypesthesia
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Mollusca
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Muscle, Skeletal
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Nausea
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Neurons
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Neurotoxins
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Paresthesia
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Permeability
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Respiration, Artificial
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Saxitoxin*
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Shellfish
;
Shellfish Poisoning*
;
Vomiting
4.Fatal Carbon Monoxide Poisoning from Incomplete Combustion of Charcoal Briquets: Effect on Public Health of Forensic Medical Expert's Announcement Through the Mass Media.
Sang Yong LEE ; Gi Yeongg HUH ; Kwang Hoon KIM ; Sung Soo EUN ; Sung Jin KIM
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2007;31(1):117-120
Carbon monoxide poisoning is probably one of the most common toxic condition to be met with the routine forensic practice. Carbon monoxide is colorless, odorless, tasteless, non-irritating gas whose relative density is a little less than that of air. The most common source of carbon monoxide in death are fires, automobile exhaust, defected heaters, and incomplete combustion of burning products, such as charcoal briquets. Suicidal deaths caused by carbon monoxide are mostly involve inhalation of automobile exhaust and rarely incomplete combustion of charcoal briquets. We recently experienced three cases of suicidal carbon monoxide death by using the carbon monoxide produced by incomplete combustion of charcoal briquets. These deaths were subsequently occurred after forensic medical expert's announcement of accidental carbon monoxide death occurred at shellfish grill restaurant through the television. And we presents four cases of carbon monoxide death with considering of the social effects of forensic medical expert's announcement through the mass media.
Burns
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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning*
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Carbon Monoxide*
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Carbon*
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Charcoal*
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Fires
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Inhalation
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Mass Media*
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Public Health*
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Restaurants
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Shellfish
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Specific Gravity
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Suicide
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Television
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Vehicle Emissions
5.Environmental and health effects associated with Harmful Algal Bloom and marine algal toxins in China.
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2004;17(2):165-176
The frequency and scale of Harmful Algal Bloom (HAB) and marine algal toxin incidents have been increasing and spreading in the past two decades, causing damages to the marine environment and threatening human life through contaminated seafood. To better understand the effect of HAB and marine algal toxins on marine environment and human health in China, this paper overviews HAB occurrence and marine algal toxin incidents, as well as their environmental and health effects in this country. HAB has been increasing rapidly along the Chinese coast since the 1970s, and at least 512 documented HAB events have occurred from 1952 to 2002 in the Chinese mainland. It has been found that PSP and DSP toxins are distributed widely along both the northern and southern Chinese coasts. The HAB and marine algal toxin events during the 1990s in China were summarized, showing that the HAB and algal toxins resulted in great damages to local fisheries, marine culture, quality of marine environment, and human health. Therefore, to protect the coastal environment and human health, attention to HAB and marine algal toxins is urgently needed from the environmental and epidemiological view.
Amnesia
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chemically induced
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Animals
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China
;
epidemiology
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Ciguatoxins
;
toxicity
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Diarrhea
;
chemically induced
;
Dinoflagellida
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Environment
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Eukaryota
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chemistry
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Eutrophication
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Fisheries
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Food Contamination
;
Foodborne Diseases
;
epidemiology
;
etiology
;
Humans
;
Kainic Acid
;
analogs & derivatives
;
poisoning
;
Lethal Dose 50
;
Marine Toxins
;
chemistry
;
poisoning
;
toxicity
;
Neurotoxicity Syndromes
;
etiology
;
Okadaic Acid
;
poisoning
;
Oxocins
;
poisoning
;
Paralysis
;
chemically induced
;
Seawater
;
Shellfish Poisoning
6.Toxic potential of palytoxin.
Jiří PATOCKA ; Ramesh C GUPTA ; Qing-hua WU ; Kamil KUCA
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2015;35(5):773-780
This review briefly describes the origin, chemistry, molecular mechanism of action, pharmacology, toxicology, and ecotoxicology of palytoxin and its analogues. Palytoxin and its analogues are produced by marine dinoflagellates. Palytoxin is also produced by Zoanthids (i.e. Palythoa), and Cyanobacteria (Trichodesmium). Palytoxin is a very large, non-proteinaceous molecule with a complex chemical structure having both lipophilic and hydrophilic moieties. Palytoxin is one of the most potent marine toxins with an LD50 of 150 ng/kg body weight in mice exposed intravenously. Pharmacological and electrophysiological studies have demonstrated that palytoxin acts as a hemolysin and alters the function of excitable cells through multiple mechanisms of action. Palytoxin selectively binds to Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase with a Kd of 20 pM and transforms the pump into a channel permeable to monovalent cations with a single-channel conductance of 10 pS. This mechanism of action could have multiple effects on cells. Evaluation of palytoxin toxicity using various animal models revealed that palytoxin is an extremely potent neurotoxin following an intravenous, intraperitoneal, intramuscular, subcutaneous or intratracheal route of exposure. Palytoxin also causes non-lethal, yet serious toxic effects following dermal or ocular exposure. Most incidents of palytoxin poisoning have manifested after oral intake of contaminated seafood. Poisonings in humans have also been noted after inhalation, cutaneous/systemic exposures with direct contact of aerosolized seawater during Ostreopsis blooms and/or through maintaining aquaria containing Cnidarian zoanthids. Palytoxin has a strong potential for toxicity in humans and animals, and currently this toxin is of great concern worldwide.
Acrylamides
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chemistry
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isolation & purification
;
toxicity
;
Animals
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Anthozoa
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pathogenicity
;
physiology
;
Dinoflagellida
;
pathogenicity
;
physiology
;
Dogs
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Guinea Pigs
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Haplorhini
;
Humans
;
Lethal Dose 50
;
Marine Toxins
;
chemistry
;
isolation & purification
;
toxicity
;
Mice
;
Rabbits
;
Rats
;
Seaweed
;
pathogenicity
;
physiology
;
Shellfish Poisoning
;
physiopathology
;
Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase
;
metabolism