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Biologic monitoring to characterize organophosphorus pesticide exposure among children and workers: an analysis of recent studies in Washington State.


We examined findings from five organophosphorus or·gan·o·phos·pho·rus  
n.
An organophosphate.



organ·o·phos
 pesticide pesticide, biological, physical, or chemical agent used to kill plants or animals that are harmful to people; in practice, the term pesticide is often applied only to chemical agents.  biomonitoring studies conducted in Washington State between 1994 and 1999. We compared urinary urinary /uri·nary/ (u´ri-nar?e) pertaining to, containing, or secreting urine.

u·ri·nar·y
adj.
1. Relating to urine and its production, function, or excretion.

2.
 dimethylthiophosphate (DMTP DMTP Disaster Management Training Programme (United Nations Development Program and Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs)
DMTP Differentiated Mail Transfer Protocol
) concentrations for all study groups and composite dimethyl di·meth·yl  
n.
An organic compound, especially ethane, containing two methyl groups.
 alkylphosphate (DMAP DMAP 4-(dimethylamino) pyridine
DMAP Division of Medical Assistance Programs
DMAP Deer Management Assistance Program
DMAP Direct Matrix Abstraction Program (macro language of NASA Structural Analysis System) 
) concentrations for selected groups. Children of pesticide applicators had substantially higher metabolite metabolite, organic compound that is a starting material in, an intermediate in, or an end product of metabolism. Starting materials are substances, usually small and of simple structure, absorbed by the organism as food.  levels than did Seattle children and farmworker children (median DMTP, 25 [micro]g/L; p < 0.0001). Metabolite levels of children living in agricultural communities were elevated during periods of crop spraying crop spraying nfumigación f de los cultivos

crop spraying npulvérisation f des cultures

crop spraying crop n
. Median DMTP concentrations for Seattle children and farmworker children did not differ significantly (6.1 and 5.8 [micro]g/L DMTP, respectively; p = 0.73); however, the DMAP concentrations were higher for Seattle children than for farmworker children (117 and 87 nmol/L DMAP, respectively; p = 0.007). DMTP concentrations of U.S. children 6-11 years of age (1999-2000 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey population) were higher than those of Seattle children and farmworker children at the 75th, 90th, and 95th percentiles. DMTP concentrations for workers actively engaged in apple thinning were 50 times higher than DMTP concentrations for farmworkers sampled outside of peak exposure periods. We conclude that workers who have direct contact with pesticides should continue to be the focus of public health interventions health intervention Health care An activity undertaken to prevent, improve, or stabilize a medical condition  and that elevated child exposures in agricultural communities may occur during active crop-spraying periods and from living with a pesticide applicator ap·pli·ca·tor
n.
An instrument for applying something, such as a medication.


applicator,
n a device for applying medication; usually a slender rod of glass or wood, used with a pledget of cotton on the end.
. Timing of sample collection is critical for the proper interpretation of pesticide biomarkers excreted relatively soon after exposure. We surmise that differences in dietary exposure can explain the similar exposures observed among farmworker children, children living in the Seattle metropolitan area The Seattle metropolitan area in Washington, USA includes the city of Seattle, King County, Snohomish County, and Pierce County within the Puget Sound area. The U.S. Census Bureau defines the metropolitan area as the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA , and children sampled nationally. Key words: agricultural communities, agricultural workers, biologic monitoring, children, dialkylphosphates, organophosphorus pesticides, pesticide exposure. Environ en·vi·ron  
tr.v. en·vi·roned, en·vi·ron·ing, en·vi·rons
To encircle; surround. See Synonyms at surround.



[Middle English envirounen, from Old French environner
 Health Perspect 113:1651-1657 (2005). doi:10.1289/ehp.8022 available via http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 6 July 2005]

**********

Children may experience greater risks from pesticide exposures than adults because of behavioral behavioral

pertaining to behavior.


behavioral disorders
see vice.

behavioral seizure
see psychomotor seizure.
, dietary, and physiologic physiologic /phys·i·o·log·ic/ (fiz?e-o-loj´ik) physiological.
Physiologic
Characteristic of normal, healthy functioning

Mentioned in: Music Therapy


physiological, physiologic

1.
 characteristics associated with development (National Research Council 1993). University of Washington researchers began an investigation of children's exposure to pesticides in 1991, with particular emphasis on organophosphorus (OP) pesticide exposures of presumed high-risk high-risk adjective Referring to an ↑ risk of suffering from a particular condition Infectious disease Referring to an ↑ risk for exposure to blood-borne pathogens, which occurs with blood bank technicians, dental professionals, dialysis unit  populations, such as children of pesticide applicators, children of farmworkers, and children living in agricultural regions with substantial agricultural pesticide use (Curl et al. 2002; Fenske et al. 2002; Koch Koch , Robert 1843-1910.

German bacteriologist who discovered the cholera bacillus and the bacterial cause of anthrax. He won a 1905 Nobel Prize for developing tuberculin.



Koch

named after Robert Koch, a German bacteriologist.
 et al. 2002; Loewenherz et al. 1997; Lu et al. 2000, 2001; Simcox et al. 1999). These studies have suggested that children with parents who apply pesticides in agriculture and who live in agricultural areas during active crop spraying receive higher OP pesticide exposure than do other children.

Each of these studies has employed biologic monitoring of urinary dialkylphosphate (DAP) metabolites Metabolites
Substances produced by metabolism or by a metabolic process.

Mentioned in: Interactions
 to yield information on OP pesticide exposure. Biologic monitoring is a valuable tool in exposure assessment, allowing for integrated measurement of exposure from all pathways and routes. Biologic monitoring has been used effectively to evaluate exposures to populations across studies and across time (Barr et al. 2004a; National Research Council 1991). This approach has been used in many regional studies to determine OP pesticide exposures among young children (Adgate et al. 2001; Aprea et al. 2000; Heudorf and Angerer 2001; Heudorf et al. 2004; Mills and Zahm 2001; Morgan Morgan, American family of financiers and philanthropists.

Junius Spencer Morgan, 1813–90, b. West Springfield, Mass., prospered at investment banking.
 et al. 2005; Royster et al. 2002; Shalat et al. 2003).

More than 30 OP pesticides are registered for use in Washington State, and many of these pesticides do not have urinary metabolites that can be considered selective. When we began the Washington State biologic monitoring studies in 1994, selective metabolites were not available for azinphosmethyl and phosmet phosmet

an organophosphorus insecticide used as a spray or pour-on to control ectoparasites.
, the primary OP pesticides used in the region. We therefore developed an assay for the DAP metabolites (Moate et al. 1999). The DAP metabolites are the common products of OP pesticide metabolism metabolism, sum of all biochemical processes involved in life. Two subcategories of metabolism are anabolism, the building up of complex organic molecules from simpler precursors, and catabolism, the breakdown of complex substances into simpler molecules, often  and integrate exposure from most registered OP pesticides (Barr et al. 2004a). The National Center for Environmental Health now includes the DAPs among the metabolites assayed as part of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES NHANES National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (US CDC) ). Their most recent reports present DAP levels for participants 6-59 years of age and thus provides information on current levels in the general U.S. population [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) 2003, 2005]. One concern in the use of exposure biomarkers is the possibility that the compounds being assayed could appear in food or the environment as degradation DEGRADATION, punishment, ecclesiastical law. A censure by which a clergy man is deprived of his holy orders, which he had as a priest or deacon.  products (Lu et al. 2005; Morgan et al. 2005). As with any breakdown products that are urinary biomarkers of toxicant toxicant /tox·i·cant/ (tok´si-kant)
1. poisonous.

2. poison.


tox·i·cant
n.
1. A poison or poisonous agent.

2. An intoxicant.

adj.
 exposure, if exposure to the breakdown product occurs, and if this compound is absorbed efficiently into the body and excreted in the urine urine, clear, amber-colored fluid formed by the kidneys that carries metabolic wastes out of the body (see urinary system). As the blood circulates it collects excretory products from the tissues and these substances are separated from the blood by the kidneys and  unchanged, then its appearance in urine samples could confound con·found  
tr.v. con·found·ed, con·found·ing, con·founds
1. To cause to become confused or perplexed. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2.
 interpretation of such measurements. To date, however, no published studies have demonstrated that DAPs behave in this fashion.

The purpose of the present analysis was to examine OP pesticide metabolite concentrations in five Washington State studies, conducting both qualitative and quantitative (statistical) comparisons, with special attention to issues of study design and sampling that make such comparisons problematic. The five studies include apple thinners exposed to OP pesticides when reentering re·en·ter also re-en·ter  
v. re·en·tered, re·en·ter·ing, re·en·ters

v.tr.
1. To enter or come in to again.

2. To record again on a list or ledger.

v.intr.
 fields after applications (Simcox et al. 1999); children of agricultural pesticide applicators, many of whom lived near pesticide-treated farmland (Loewenherz et al. 1997; Lu et al. 2000); children living in the Seattle metropolitan area whose parents were not occupationally exposed to pesticides (Lu et al. 2001); children living in an agricultural community whose parents were not involved significantly in agricultural production (Koch et al. 2002); and children living in households with adults employed as farmworkers in a variety of agricultural activities (Curl et al. 2002; Thompson Thompson, city, Canada
Thompson, city (1991 pop. 14,977), central Man., Canada, on the Burntwood River. A mining town, it developed after large nickel deposits were discovered in the area in 1956.
 et al. 2003). The aforementioned a·fore·men·tioned  
adj.
Mentioned previously.

n.
The one or ones mentioned previously.


aforementioned
Adjective

mentioned before

Adj. 1.
 biologic monitoring data from the CDC provide an opportunity to draw comparisons between the study populations and the general U.S. population (Barr et al. 2004a; CDC 2003). It is our hope that this analysis will prove useful in the development of future study designs and sampling plans for population-based pesticide exposure studies.

Materials and Methods

We used seven populations enrolled in five independent studies, all of which took place in Washington State between 1994 and 1999, in this analysis. Our previous reports included detailed descriptions of population recruitment, sample collection, and sample analysis (Curl et al. 2002; Koch et al. 2002; Loewenherz et al. 1997; Lu et al. 2000, 2001; Simcox et al. 1999; Thompson et al. 2003). Tables 1 and 2 provide geographic location, number and age of participants, and number of samples collected in these studies and describe relevant occupational or para-occupational factors, as well as relationships between sampling time and active crop spraying with OP pesticides.

Study designs. Three studies included in this analysis were cross-sectional in design. The first was conducted in Douglas and Chelan Counties in the Wenatchee Valley region of central Washington Central Washington is a region of the United States defined as the western half of Eastern Washington, or those counties lying east of the Cascade Mountains but west of the 119th meridian.  State. The primary industry in this region is tree fruit production, and the area includes many small family orchards. Forty-nine families of pesticide applicators participated in this study, including 72 children between the ages of 2 and 6 years (applicator children). Each child provided two individual urinary voids separated by 3-7 days. Sample collection occurred between May and July of 1995, during the time that dimethyl OP pesticides were applied to control the codling moth codling moth (kŏd`lĭng), small moth, Carpocapsa pomonella, whose larva is the destructive apple worm. Of European origin, it is now found wherever apples are grown.  (Figure 1). A complete discussion of the methods for this study is provided by Loewenherz et al. (1997) and Lu et al. (2000).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

The second cross-sectional study cross-sectional study
n.
See synchronic study.


cross-sectional study,
n the scientific method for the analysis of data gathered from two or more samples at one point in time.
 occurred in the Seattle metropolitan area (King and Snohomish counties). Participants included 110 children 2-5 years of age from 96 families. Parents of children enrolled in this study were not occupationally exposed to pesticides. Participating families were originally separated into one of two groups based on socioeconomic status socioeconomic status,
n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion.
, but no difference was observed in OP pesticide metabolite levels based on community or family income (Lu et al. 2001). These children were considered a single group (Seattle children) in the present analysis. Each child provided one sample in the spring of 1998 (May-June) and another in the fall of 1998 (September-November), as indicated in Figure 1. Methods for this study are described by Lu et al. (2001).

The third cross-sectional study was designed as a baseline survey of communities enrolled in a multiyear community intervention A procedure used in a lawsuit by which the court allows a third person who was not originally a party to the suit to become a party, by joining with either the plaintiff or the defendant.  project. It included 24 communities in the Yakima Valley region of Washington State. This area, like the Wenatchee Valley, is a very productive agricultural region that includes tree fruit production. Dimethyl OP pesticides are applied in the late spring to protect against the codling moth, and other OP pesticides are used as a part of agricultural production. Two hundred eighteen households including both an adult farmworker and a child 2-6 years of age were enrolled in this study. The farmworkers were engaged in a variety of work tasks, such as harvesting, pruning pruning, the horticultural practice of cutting away an unwanted, unnecessary, or undesirable plant part, used most often on trees, shrubs, hedges, and woody vines. , planting, weeding weed 1  
n.
1.
a. A plant considered undesirable, unattractive, or troublesome, especially one growing where it is not wanted, as in a garden.

b. Rank growth of such plants.

2.
, and irrigating. About 20% reported some involvement in pesticide mixing, loading, or application. Urine samples were provided by 213 adults (farmworkers) involved in agricultural tasks such as harvesting, weeding, and pesticide applications, as well as by 211 farmworker children. Urine samples for farmworkers and farmworker children consisted of a composite of either two or three voids, each separated by a minimum of 3 days, and all collected within a 2-week period. These samples were collected between July and October of 1999 (Figure 1). Methods for this study are described by Curl et al. (2002) and Thompson et al. (2003).

The two remaining studies included in this analysis focused on relatively small populations but sampled participants repeatedly over time. Both were conducted in the Wenatchee region of Washington State. The first study investigated dimethyl OP pesticide exposures in a group of 20 adult apple thinners; sampling took place between May and July of 1994. These workers entered treated fields soon after OP pesticide applications (Figure 1). Each worker provided between 7 and 21 individual voids; a total of 293 voids from these workers were included in this analysis. Methods for this study are described by Simcox et al. (1999).

The last study included in the analysis was a longitudinal study longitudinal study

a chronological study in epidemiology which attempts to establish a relationship between an antecedent cause and a subsequent effect. See also cohort study.
 of OP pesticide exposures among preschool children living in an agricultural community. A group of 44 children 2-5 years of age provided biweekly bi·week·ly  
adj.
1. Happening every two weeks.

2. Happening twice a week; semiweekly.

n. pl. bi·week·lies
A publication issued every two weeks.

adv.
1. Every two weeks.
 urine samples for up to 1 year. Sampling for this study was conducted between December 1997 and August 1999. This encompassed two periods of active crop spraying (Figure 1). Koch et al. (2002) reported that dimethyl OP pesticide metabolite levels were significantly elevated in these children during the periods of active crop spraying. Therefore, samples collected during periods of active crop spraying (farm community children, spray season) were considered separately from those collected during other times of the year (farm community children, nonspray season). This analysis included 274 samples collected from the 44 children during the spray season and 694 samples collected during the nonspray season. Methods for this study are described by Koch et al. (2002).

Sample analysis. Urine samples collected in all studies were analyzed an·a·lyze  
tr.v. an·a·lyzed, an·a·lyz·ing, an·a·lyz·es
1. To examine methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations.

2. Chemistry To make a chemical analysis of.

3.
 for DAP metabolites common to most OP pesticides. We selected dimethyl DAP metabolites as the focus for comparisons across studies because they were substantially and consistently higher than diethyl metabolites in all studies. Dimethylthiophosphate (DMTP) was selected as the best comparative indicator of exposure across all studies. DMTP has been found to be the dominant of the three dimethyl DAP metabolites in samples analyzed in all of our studies (Curl et al. 2002, 2003; Koch et al. 2002; Lu et al. 2000, 2001; Simcox et al. 1999), as well as in the 1999-2000 NHANES population (NHANES III NHANES III Third National Health & Nutrition Examination Survey Public health A population-based survey conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics, designed to assess the health and nutritional status of the noninstitutionalized Americans ; CDC 2003).

Sample analysis for all of the studies was conducted by the University of Washington Environmental Health Laboratory following the procedure described by Moate et al. (1999). This procedure involved solid-phase extraction, azeotropic distillation distillation, process used to separate the substances composing a mixture. It involves a change of state, as of liquid to gas, and subsequent condensation. The process was probably first used in the production of intoxicating beverages. , and derivatization with pentafluoro(methyl methyl (mĕth`əl), CH3, organic free radical or alkyl group derived from methane by the removal of one hydrogen atom. )benzylbromide, followed by gas chromatographic chro·mat·o·graph  
n.
An instrument that produces a chromatogram.

tr.v. chro·mat·o·graphed, chro·mat·o·graph·ing, chro·mat·o·graphs
To separate and analyze by chromatography.
 detection. That all samples were analyzed within the same laboratory provides reassurance REASSURANCE. When an insurer is desirous of lessening his liability, he may procure some other insurer to insure him from loss, for the insurance he has made this is called reassurance.  that urinary metabolite levels can be compared directly, because results of such assays have been shown to vary across laboratories (James et al. 2003).

Samples with metabolite concentrations below the limit of detection (LOD Lod (lōd), city (1994 pop. 51,200), central Israel. It is also known as Lydda. Its manufactures include paper products, chemicals, oil products, electronic equipment, processed food, and cigarettes. ) were assigned as·sign  
tr.v. as·signed, as·sign·ing, as·signs
1. To set apart for a particular purpose; designate: assigned a day for the inspection.

2.
 one-half the value of the LOD for this analysis. The LOD in the later studies was lower than for the 1994 study of apple thinners and the 1995 study of applicator families (e.g., 40 [micro]g/L LOD for DMTP in 1994, 20 [micro]g/L in 1995, 1.1 [micro]g/L in 1998 and 1999). To reduce the relative impact of this higher detection limit, we assumed the lower detection limits for all studies. This assumption lowered the estimates of exposure for the apple thinner and applicator children populations relative to the other populations. Comparison of the data below the 25th percentile percentile,
n the number in a frequency distribution below which a certain percentage of fees will fall. E.g., the ninetieth percentile is the number that divides the distribution of fees into the lower 90% and the upper 10%, or that fee level
 is problematic because of these differences in detection limits.

Data analysis. In the 1995 study of applicator children, DMTP levels measured in the two samples (collected 3-7 days apart) were averaged to yield one value per child. This is essentially equivalent to the procedure employed in the 1999 farmworker and farmworker children study, where equal volumes of two or three samples (collected within 2 weeks) were pooled and the resultant This article is about the resultant of polynomials. For the result of adding two or more vectors, see Parallelogram rule. For the technique in organ building, see Resultant (organ).

In mathematics, the resultant of two monic polynomials
 composite sample was analyzed to yield one value per child. Two samples were also collected per child in the 1998 Seattle children study; the first in the spring and the second several months later (Lu et al. 2001) showed no difference in DAP metabolite levels related to season of sample collection, so these samples were averaged to yield one value per child. In a few cases for each of these studies, only one sample was provided or analyzed per child. In these instances, that sample was assumed to provide the best available estimate of the child's exposure. It seems unlikely that these sampling differences could produce substantial differences for the analyses conducted.

Distributions of urinary DMTP concentrations (micrograms of metabolite per liter liter, abbr. l, unit of volume in the metric system, defined since 1964 as equal to 0.001 cubic meters, or 1 cubic decimeter. A cube that has each of its edges equal to 10 centimeters has a volume of 1 liter. The liter is equal to 1.057 liquid quarts, 0.  of urine) were created for the populations sampled in the three cross-sectional studies. These distributions were compared at various percentiles, and cumulative frequency distributions were created to describe the data. The metabolite levels for two of the populations were not normally distributed; therefore, nonparametric tests including the Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank test for paired samples and the Mann-Whitney U-test for independent samples were used to determine significant differences between groups. All analyses were performed using the statistical package Stata Stata (Statistics/Data Analysis) is a statistical program created in 1985 by Statacorp that is used by many businesses and academic institutions around the world. Most of its users work in research, especially in the fields of economics, sociology, political science, and  6.0 (StataCorp, College Station, TX) or SPSS A statistical package from SPSS, Inc., Chicago (www.spss.com) that runs on PCs, most mainframes and minis and is used extensively in marketing research. It provides over 50 statistical processes, including regression analysis, correlation and analysis of variance.  10.0.5 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).

The three dimethyl DAP concentrations (dimethylphosphate, DMTP, and dimethyl-dithiophosphate) for each sample were converted to their molar equivalents A molar equivalent of a substance is an amount of matter quantity, multiplied by a stoichiometric factor, which depends on the exact reaction. The normality is defined as molar equivalent per litre. The gram equivalent is the same.  and summed to produce a composite dimethyl alkylphosphate (DMAP) value (nanomoles of metabolite per liter of urine) for the Seattle children and the farmworker children to allow a more thorough comparison of these two populations. The Mann-Whitney U-test for independent samples was used to compare these groups.

Differences in sampling strategies between these three studies and the two repeated-measures studies precluded direct statistical comparisons across all groups. To assess the exposure of the apple thinner and farm community children study populations, we calculated the arithmetic mean (mathematics) arithmetic mean - The mean of a list of N numbers calculated by dividing their sum by N. The arithmetic mean is appropriate for sets of numbers that are added together or that form an arithmetic series.  DMTP level for each participant. Distributions of these mean concentrations were created and compared at various percentiles.

Creatinine creatinine /cre·at·i·nine/ (kre-at´i-nin) an anhydride of creatine, the end product of phosphocreatine metabolism; measurements of its rate of urinary excretion are used as diagnostic indicators of kidney function and muscle mass.  was measured in most of these studies, but we chose not to adjust the values because of concerns regarding the validity of such adjustments, particularly for children (Barr et al. 2005).

Results

The five studies examined in this analysis included 437 children and 233 adults, who provided > 2,000 urine samples. Maximum values and selected percentiles for DMTP levels in the urine of the adult farmworkers, applicator children, farmworker children, and Seattle children in the cross-sectional studies are presented in Table 3. At the median (50th percentile), DMTP concentrations were highest in children of applicators (25 [micro]g/L), followed by adult farmworkers (10 [micro]g/L), and then children living in the Seattle area and children of farmworkers (6.1 and 5.8 [micro]g/L, respectively). This pattern continued at the 75th percentile, with applicator children higher than adult farmworkers (44 vs. 32 [micro]g/L), and Seattle children higher than farmworker children (17 vs. 13 [micro]g/L). Even at the 90th percentile, the DMTP concentrations for applicator children were greater than for adult farmworkers (110 vs. 99 [micro]g/L) and the other two groups. At the 95th percentile, however, this trend changed, with adult farmworkers having the highest concentrations (180 [micro]g/L), followed by applicator children (130 [micro]g/L), farmworker children (50 [micro]g/L), and finally Seattle children (39 [micro]g/L). The cumulative distributions for the top 50th percentile of these four populations are presented in Figure 2.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

Metabolite concentrations in applicator children were higher than those in adult farmworkers (p = 0.02), although this difference was not statistically significant when correction for multiple comparisons was included in the analysis. DMTP concentrations in the urine of the applicator children were higher than those of either the farmworker children (Mann-Whitney U-test, p < 0.0001) or the Seattle children (Mann-Whitney U-test, p < 0.0001). Adult farmworker concentrations were higher than those of either the farmworker children (Wilcoxon matched pairs, p < 0.0001) or the Seattle children (Mann-Whitney U-test, p = 0.002). DMTP concentrations in farmworker children were not significantly different from those in Seattle children (p = 0.73). This information is summarized in Table 4.

We compared DMTP levels in these four populations qualitatively with DMTP levels in the NHANES III population survey (CDC 2003) for children 6-11 years of age (the youngest population sampled) and Mexican Americans This is a list of notable Mexican-Americans. Athletes
Baseball players
  • Arturo Stenger- MLB Roadie?
  • Hank Aguirre - MLB pitcher
  • Frank Arellanes - First Mexican American MLB player
  • Eric Chavez - MLB third baseman
 (most of the adult farmworkers in the 1999 cross-sectional study were Hispanic). Table 3 presents DMTP levels for the 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th, and 95th percentiles. Applicator children had higher levels than did the NHANES III children at all percentiles. Farmworker children and Seattle children had higher DMTP concentrations at the 50th percentile than did the NHANES III children, but not at the higher percentiles. DMTP concentrations for the adult farmworkers were consistently higher than the NHANES III Mexican-American subgroup sub·group  
n.
1. A distinct group within a group; a subdivision of a group.

2. A subordinate group.

3. Mathematics A group that is a subset of a group.

tr.v.
.

Table 5 presents the distributions for composite DMAP concentrations from the Seattle children and the farmworker children. DMAP concentrations were significantly higher for the Seattle children compared with the farmworker children (median values Noun 1. median value - the value below which 50% of the cases fall
median

statistics - a branch of applied mathematics concerned with the collection and interpretation of quantitative data and the use of probability theory to estimate population
 of 117 nmol/L and 87 nmol/L, respectively; p = 0.007). At the 50th percentile, DMAP concentrations were similar for the NHANES III children (6-11 years of age) and the farmworker children. At the 75th and 90th percentiles, the NHANES III values were similar to the Seattle children values and substantially higher than the farmworker children values. At the 95th percentile, the NHANES III values were substantially higher than either the Seattle children or farmworker children values.

Distributions of DMTP levels in the repeated-measures studies are presented in Table 6, which provides the 25th, 50th, 75th and 95th percentiles of the arithmetic mean urinary DMTP concentrations for the apple thinners, the farm community children (spray season), and the farm community children (nonspray season). DMTP concentrations among the apple thinners, who worked in fields soon after crop spraying, were one to two orders of magnitude greater than those of the farm community children. The 50th percentile DMTP concentration for the apple thinners (530 [micro]g/L; Table 5) was > 50 times higher than that of the adult farmworkers (10 [micro]g/L; Table 2). As reported by Koch et al. (2002), metabolite concentrations were significantly higher for the farm community children during the spray season than during the nonspray season.

Figure 2 includes data points describing the 75th and 95th percentiles of the arithmetic mean urinary DMTP concentrations for the farm community children during both the spray and nonspray seasons. Metabolite levels for the apple thinners were beyond the scale of this figure. Figure 2 demonstrates that, at the 75th percentile, all children except for the applicator children had roughly similar metabolite levels. At the 95th percentile, the farm community children (spray season) demonstrated higher levels than did the Seattle children, the farmworker children, and the farm community children (nonspray season). The maximum value for the farm community children (spray season) also exceeded the maximum value for the farmworker children [180 [micro]g/L (Table 6) and 140 [micro]g/L (Table 3), respectively].

Discussion

The two most striking findings from this analysis were the relatively high levels of metabolites among applicator children compared with the other study groups and the similarity Similarity is some degree of symmetry in either analogy and resemblance between two or more concepts or objects. The notion of similarity rests either on exact or approximate repetitions of patterns in the compared items.  in metabolite levels between farmworker children sampled in 1999 and Seattle metropolitan area children sampled in 1998.

DMTP levels in children of pesticide applicators sampled in 1995 were significantly higher than those in the farmworker children in 1999, and were also higher than those in farmworkers in 1999 up to the 90th percentile. Direct comparison of these populations is problematic because pest control pest control ncontrol m de plagas

pest control nlutte f contre les nuisibles

pest control pest n
 strategies may have changed over the 4 years that separated these studies. Pesticide use practices in this region are geared to many factors, including crop type, weather, pest infestation infestation /in·fes·ta·tion/ (-fes-ta´shun) parasitic attack or subsistence on the skin and/or its appendages, as by insects, mites, or ticks; sometimes used to denote parasitic invasion of the organs and tissues, as by helminths.  levels, and adoption of less chemical-intensive integrated pest management Integrated Pest Management (IPM), planned program that coordinates economically and environmentally acceptable methods of pest control with the judicious and minimal use of toxic pesticides.  techniques. Additionally, the 1995 study sampled children during the active crop spraying season, whereas the 1999 sampling occurred for the most part after the peak spraying period.

One way to gauge changes in pesticide use that is less affected by the time of sampling is to examine pesticide concentrations in household dust in these studies. Such an approach is based on the observation that pesticide concentrations in house dust are less susceptible to short-term fluctuations than are urinary metabolite measurements, and on the assumption that changes in pesticide levels in dust reflect changes in pesticide use practices and therefore differences in exposure opportunity. In a previous study, we noted that ethyl ethyl (ĕth`əl), CH3CH2, organic free radical or alkyl group derived from ethane by removing one hydrogen atom.  parathion parathion: see insecticide.  concentrations in house dust decreased dramatically after this compound was withdrawn from agricultural use (Fenske et al. 2002). Figure 3 provides the median house dust concentrations of azinphosmethyl and phosmet--the primary dimethyl OP pesticides used in regional tree fruit production--from studies conducted in 1992 (Simcox et al. 1995), 1995 (Lu et al. 2000), and 1999 (Curl et al. 2002). These concentrations decreased over time: Azinphosmethyl concentrations in 1999 were about half those measured in 1995, and phosmet concentrations decreased even more dramatically. Other factors that might explain this difference include relatively high parental exposures during pesticide handling with consequent con·se·quent  
adj.
1.
a. Following as a natural effect, result, or conclusion: tried to prevent an oil spill and the consequent damage to wildlife.

b.
 para-occupational exposure for the children, and the close proximity of the homes of many applicators to pesticide-treated farmland.

A second striking finding from this analysis was the lack of a significant difference between DMTP levels in farmworker children and Seattle children (Table 3) and the significantly higher DMAP concentrations among Seattle children compared with those in the farmworker children (Table 5). We had anticipated that the farmworker children would exhibit higher metabolite concentrations, given the widespread use of dimethyl OP pesticides in the Yakima Valley where they resided. The Seattle population consisted of 2- to 5-year-old healthy children living in the Seattle metropolitan area who had no known risk factors for pesticide exposure; less than half of the parents of these children reported use of any pesticides on lawns, gardens, indoors, or pets (Lu et al. 2001). The farmworker children were of a similar age, resided in the lower Yakima Valley about 150 miles east of Seattle, and were also considered a healthy population; all farmworker children lived with at least one adult actively engaged in farm labor (Thompson et al. 2003). It appears that most of these farmworker children had dimethyl OP pesticide metabolite concentrations lower than or indistinguishable from those of children living in urban and suburban environments whose parents did not work with pesticides. We have also examined the DMTP and DMAP metabolite concentrations of child subgroups in the Yakima Valley study based on the agricultural task of the adult farmworker (e.g., pesticide application, crop thinning) and did not find differences across these subgroups (Fenske et al. 2004). That the farmworker children did not have unusually high metabolite levels is further confirmed by comparison of these data with the 1999-2000 NHANES data for children 6-11 years of age (Tables 3, 5). Data comparisons across laboratories can be problematic, but in this case the CDC laboratory that analyzed the NHANES samples and the University of Washington laboratory that analyzed the present results had participated in a round-robin test for the DAP compounds, and these labs were found to produce comparable results (James et al. 2003).

DAP metabolite measurements probably reflect exposures that occurred in the previous 3-5 days. Most of the farmworker children's samples were collected well after dimethyl OP pesticide crop spraying in the region, so the measured urinary metabolite concentrations did not necessarily capture peak exposures for this population that may have occurred in the late spring and early summer. The longitudinal study of children in an agricultural community reviewed here (Koch et al. 2002) provides persuasive evidence that DAP metabolite levels can increase during such spraying periods, and the 1995 study of children of pesticide applicators sampled during the active crop spraying period had higher metabolite levels than did other children in the same community (Loewenherz et al. 1997; Lu et al. 2000).

Our comparison of metabolite levels in farmworker children and Seattle children led us to conduct a dietary exposure study in the Seattle metropolitan area. We examined OP pesticide exposures in preschool children who consumed con·sume  
v. con·sumed, con·sum·ing, con·sumes

v.tr.
1. To take in as food; eat or drink up. See Synonyms at eat.

2.
a.
 primarily organic juice and produce and those of children who consumed conventional (nonorganic) foods (Curl et al. 2003). We found that diet appeared to be the primary contributor to OP pesticide exposure among these children: The median DMAP concentration for children consuming organic juice and produce was about five times lower than for children with conventional diets (30 vs. 170 nmol/L, respectively). The median DMAP concentration for the farmworker children in the Yakima Valley study was 87 nmol/L. We speculate that a conventional diet rich with juices and fresh produce may have been more common among the Seattle children compared with the farmworker children. Supporting evidence for the importance of dietary differences was reported recently for a family in Germany (Heudoff et al. 2004). DAP concentrations were relatively low in a father and son compared with the mother's levels. It was then learned that the mother had a special diet with a very high intake of fresh fruit. Substitution Substitution
Arsinoë

put her own son in place of Orestes; her son was killed and Orestes was saved. [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 32]

Barabbas

robber freed in Christ’s stead. [N.T.: Matthew 27:15–18; Swed. Lit.
 of supermarket fruit with organic (pesticide-free) fruit reduced the mother's DAP concentration to those of her family members.

A third finding of this analysis was the 50-fold difference in DMTP concentrations between apple thinners and adult farmworkers. Although the apple thinner study was conducted in 1994, the metabolite levels measured at the time are considered representative of 1999 exposures, based on dislodgeable foliar foliar

pertaining to or having the quality of leaves.
 residues measured at the time, allowable application rates, and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  estimates (Fenske et al. 2003). Biologic measurements of farmworkers' pesticide exposure need to be collected during active work periods to capture peak exposures. It is interesting to note, however, that the adult farmworkers in the 1999 study had higher DMTP levels than did the NHANES III Mexican-American population, despite the fact that most farmworker samples were collected after peak exposures. This comparison supports the view that farmworkers represent an important subpopulation sub·pop·u·la·tion  
n.
A part or subdivision of a population, especially one originating from some other population: microbial subpopulations.

Noun 1.
 of Mexican Americans with respect to pesticide exposure.

Several other studies have employed DAP metabolites to estimate OP pesticide exposures among children. DAP concentration data from most of these studies have been compared in a recent publication (Barr et al. 2004a). A 1995 study in central Italy Central Italy is a geographic area in Italy that encompasses four of the country's 20 autonomous regions:
  • Lazio
  • Marches
  • Tuscany
  • Umbria
See also
  • Groups of regions of Italy
  • Northern Italy
  • Southern Italy
  • Insular Italy
 included collection of spot urine samples from 195 school children 6-7 years of age (Aprea et al. 2000). The primary findings of the study were that DAP concentrations were higher if pest control operations had been performed inside or outside the house in the preceding month, and that higher DAP concentrations were found for children than for a comparable adult population. Results were expressed as nanomole per gram of creatinine and so could not be compared directly with the present data. A 1998 study in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, involved collection of spot urine samples from residents in former U.S. Forces housing, including 309 children [less than or equal to] 5 years of age (Heudorf and Angerer 2001; Heudorf et al. 2004). These children had higher DAP concentrations than did adults (Heudorf and Angerer 2001). The median DMTP concentration among these children was 18.8 [micro]g/L (Heudorf et al. 2004), exceeding the median concentrations of all of our study groups except applicator children. The authors concluded that the primary source of OP pesticide exposure in this population was from diet, and that these exposures in children may reach and even exceed the World Health Organization's acceptable daily intake acceptable daily intake

the amount of a drug or chemical residue to which an animal can be exposed daily for a lifetime without suffering a deleterious or injurious effect, on the basis of all of the facts known at the time.
 values (Heudorf et al. 2004).

A 1997 study of farmworker families near Fresno, California “Fresno” redirects here. For other uses, see Fresno (disambiguation).

Fresno is the sixth-largest city in California and the county seat of Fresno County, with an official Census Bureau estimated population of 481,035 as of July 1, 2006.
, included collection of spot urine samples from 9 children and 18 adults (Mills and Zahm 2001). Most samples did not have detectable levels of the six DAP metabolites. Frequency of detection was higher among children than among adults. The mean DMTP concentration (13 [micro]g/L) for children was similar to the mean value (14 [micro]g/L) found in the study of farmworker children in Washington (Curl et al. 2002).

A 2000 study in an agricultural community near the U.S.-Mexico border in southern Texas included collection of spot urine samples from 41 children (Shalat et al. 2003): Only eight of these samples (19.6%) had detectable levels of DMTP. The authors concluded that wipe (1) To completely erase data from memory or the hard disk. See file wipe.

(2) A digital video effect that places one image over another. Although there are a myriad varieties, the classic wipe is a scene transition where the next scene slides horizontally or
 samples of children's hands may serve as a better exposure metric for epidemiologic studies epidemiologic study A study that compares 2 groups of people who are alike except for one factor, such as exposure to a chemical or the presence of a health effect; the investigators try to determine if any factor is associated with the health effect  than do house dust samples. Comparison with the Washington State studies was not possible because DMTP detection frequency was low and DMAP concentrations were not reported.

A 2000 study in Imperial County, California Imperial County is a county located in the Imperial Valley, in the far southeast of the U.S. state of California, bordering both Arizona and Mexico. It is part of the 'El Centro, California Metropolitan Statistical Area' which encompasses all of Imperial County. , focused on 20 children 11-17 months of age. The study examined the relationship between proximity of homes to treated farmland and DAP concentrations in the urine of the young children living in these homes (Royster et al. 2002). The median DMTP concentration reported was 3.2 [micro]g/L, or about one-half that observed in our studies of farmworker and Seattle children. No significant difference was found between DAP concentrations of children living within 400 m (one-quarter mile) and those living more than 400 m from an agricultural field. It is not clear that the statistical analysis (nonparametric Mann-Whitney U-test) had sufficient power to detect a difference, given the sample sizes of five and nine, respectively. The authors did not compare DAP concentrations in the children living nearest to (< 400 m) and farthest from (> 800 m) farmland. It is interesting to note that the mean DAP concentration in the first group was 4.4 times higher than the mean concentration for the second group (123 vs. 28 [micro]g/g creatinine), indicating that the most highly exposed children lived nearer to farmland. The 1995 study of applicator children in Washington State found that DAP concentrations were higher in children who lived closer to agricultural fields (Loewenherz et al. 1997; Lu et al. 2000), using several distance categories that were < 400 m, and a larger sample size. This study also focused on children more likely to spend time outdoors (2- to 5-year-olds) than did the Imperial County study (1- to 2-year-olds).

Conclusions

This analysis makes evident that measurements of short-lived metabolites in urine show marked variability both within and across different studies. Children of pesticide applicators sampled during the active spraying season exhibited high DAP concentrations relative to other child populations. Children in an agricultural community without pesticide applicators in their households exhibited higher DAP concentrations during the active crop spraying season than during the rest of the year. Children of farmworkers sampled largely outside of the peak spraying season had DAP concentrations similar to or lower than those of children in the Seattle metropolitan area. This analysis highlights the importance of sample timing in biomarker biomarker /bio·mark·er/ (bi´o-mahr?ker)
1. a biological molecule used as a marker for a substance or process of interest.

2. tumor marker.


bi·o·mark·er
n.
1.
 studies of pesticide exposure and suggests that identification of high-exposure subpopulations in urban and rural communities can be challenging. Future studies should be designed as longitudinal lon·gi·tu·di·nal
adj.
Running in the direction of the long axis of the body or any of its parts.
 investigations with frequent repeated measurements to capture peak exposures and characterize intrapersonal in·tra·per·son·al  
adj.
Existing or occurring within the individual self or mind.



intra·per
 and interpersonal in·ter·per·son·al  
adj.
1. Of or relating to the interactions between individuals: interpersonal skills.

2.
 variability. This analysis also highlights the difficulty of designing epidemiologic studies to evaluate potential health effects of pesticide exposure in children. It cannot be assumed that children in agricultural communities have higher exposures than children in other environments, without taking into account crop spraying patterns and parental contact with pesticides. Studies that seek to categorize cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 children's exposure in these communities will need to sample both peak and nonpeak exposure periods and will need to evaluate multiple exposure pathways.

Received 16 February 2005; accepted 6 July 2005.

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  • An individual not tied to land under the Medieval feudal system, unlike a villein or serf
  • A person who has been awarded Freedom of the City or "Freedom of the Company" in a Livery Company
  • The Freeman
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Barr DB, Wilder LC, Caudill SP, Bonzalez A J, Needham LL, Pirkle JL. 2005. Urinary creatinine concentrations in the U.S. population: implications for urinary biological monitoring measurements. Environ Health Perspect 113:192-200. doi:10.1289/ehp.7337 [Online 23 September 2004].

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Curl CL, Fenske RA, Kissel This article is about a dessert. For the car company, see Kissel Motor Car Company.

Kissel (Kisiel in Polish, kiisseli in Finnish) is a popular dessert in Eastern and Northern Europe.
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Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
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Heudorf U, Angerer J, Drexler H. 2004. Current internal exposure to pesticides in children and adolescents in Germany: urinary levels of metabolites of pyrethroid py·re·throid  
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Any of several synthetic compounds similar to pyrethrin, used as an insecticide.
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James RR, Hern hern  
n.
A heron.



[Variant of heron.]
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Koch D, Lu CA, Fisker-Andersen J, Jolley L, Fenske RA. 2002. Temporal Having to do with time. Contrast with "spatial," which deals with space.  association of children's pesticide exposure and agricultural spraying: report of a longitudinal biological monitoring study. Environ Health Perspect 110:829-833.

Loewenherz C, Fenske RA, Simcox N J, Bellamy (3, Kalman D. 1997. Biological monitoring of organophosphorus pesticide exposure among children of agricultural workers in central Washington State. Environ Health Perspect 105:1344-1353.

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Lu C, Fenske RA, Simcox N J, Kalman D. 2000. Pesticide exposure of children in an agricultural community: evidence of household proximity to farmland and take-home exposure pathways. Environ Res 84:290-302.

Lu C, Knutson DE, Fisker-Andersen J, Fenske RA. 2001. Biological monitoring survey of organophosphorus pesticide exposure among preschool children in the Seattle metropolitan area. Environ Health Perspect 109:299-303.

Mills PK, Zahm SH. 2001. Organophosphate pesticide organophosphate pesticide A phosphorus-rich organic compound–eg, parathion, that contain a halide which phosphorylates cholinesterase and irreversibly inhibits its activity Management Atropine, pralidoxime  residues in urine of farmworkers and their children in Fresno County, California Fresno County is a county located in the Central Valley of the U.S. state of California, south of Stockton and north of Bakersfield. As of 2007, its population was 1,002,284. The county seat is Fresno. . Am J Ind Med 40:571-577.

Moate T, Lu C, Fenske RA, Hahne R, Kalman DA. 1999. Improved cleanup and determination of dialkyl phosphates phosphates (fos´fāts),
n.pl the organic compounds of phosphorus. The blood phosphate level is normally 2.5 mg to 5 mg/100 ml. It is low in rickets and early hyperparathyroidism and high in tetany and nephritis.
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a·nal
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1. Of, relating to, or near the anus.

2.
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Morgan MK, Sheldon LS, Croghan CW, Jones PA, Robertson GL, Chuang JC, et al. 2005. Exposures of preschool children to chlorpyrifos and its degradation product 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol in their everyday environments. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol 15:297-309.

National Research Council. 1991. Monitoring Human Tissues for Toxic Substances. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

National Research Council. 1993. Pesticides in the Diets of Infants and Children. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

Royster MO, Hilborn ED, Barr D, Catty cat·ty 1  
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1. Subtly cruel or malicious; spiteful: a catty remark.

2. Catlike; stealthy.
 CL, Rhoney S, Walsh D. 2002. A pilot study of global positioning system/geographical information system measurement of residential proximity to agricultural fields and urinary organophosphate organophosphate /or·ga·no·phos·phate/ (or?gah-no-fos´fat) an organic ester of phosphoric or thiophosphoric acid; such compounds are powerful acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and are used as insecticides and nerve gases.  metabolite concentrations in toddlers. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol 12:433-440.

Shalat SL, Donnelly KC, Freeman NC, Calvin JA, Ramesh S, Jimenez M, et al. 2003. Nondietary ingestion ingestion /in·ges·tion/ (-chun) the taking of food, drugs, etc., into the body by mouth.

in·ges·tion
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 of pesticides by children in an agricultural community on the US/Mexico border: preliminary results. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol 13:42-50.

Simcox NJ, Camp J, Kalman D, Stebbins A, Bellamy G, Lee I-C, et al. 1999. Farmworker exposure to organophosphorus pesticide residues Pesticide residue refers to the pesticides that may remain on or in food after they are applied to food crops.[1] Regulation of pesticide residue in the US  during apple thinning in central Washington State. Am Ind Hyg Assoc J 60:752-761.

Simcox NJ, Fenske RA, Wolz S, Lee I-C, Kalman D. 1995. Pesticides in housedust and soil: exposure pathways for children of agricultural families. Environ Health Perspect 103:1126-1134.

Thompson B, Coronado GD, Grossman JE, Puschel K, Solomon CC, Islas I, et al. 2003. Pesticide take-home pathway pathway /path·way/ (path´wa)
1. a course usually followed.

2. the nerve structures through which an impulse passes between groups of nerve cells or between the central nervous system and an organ or muscle.
 among children of agricultural workers: study design, methods, and baseline findings. J 0ccup Environ Med 45(1):42-53.

Richard A. Fenske, (1) Chensheng Lu, (2) Cynthia L. Curl, (3) Jeffry H. Shirai, (1) and John C. Kissel (1)

(1) Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington This page is protected from moves until disputes have been resolved on the .
The reason for its protection is listed on the protection policy page.
, USA; (2) Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Rollins School of Public Health The Rollins School of Public Health (RSPH) is the public health school of Emory University. Founded in 1990, RSPH has more than 850 students pursuing master's degrees (MPH/MSPH) and over 100 students pursuing doctorate degrees (PhD). , Emory University Emory University (ĕm`ərē), near Atlanta, Ga.; coeducational; United Methodist; chartered as Emory College 1836, opened 1837 at Oxford. It became Emory Univ. in 1915 and in 1919 moved to Atlanta. , Atlanta, Georgia, USA; (3) Integral Consulting Inc., Boulder, Colorado The City of Boulder (, Mountain Time Zone) is a home rule municipality located in Boulder County, Colorado, United States. Boulder is the 11th most populous city in the State of Colorado, as well as the most populous city and the county , USA

Address correspondence to R.A. Fenske, University of Washington, Box 357234, Health Sciences Building, F-233, 1959 N.E. Pacific St., Seattle, WA 98195-7234 USA. Telephone: (206) 543-0916. Fax: (206) 616-2687. E-mail: rfenske@u.washington.edu

Contributors to the studies discussed include J. Camp, G. Coronado, I. Islas, C. Loewenherz, G. Kedan, D. Knutson, D. Koch, T. Moate, N. Simcox, and B. Thompson.

This work was supported by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) STAR program (R819186), the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health,
n.pr an institute of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that is responsible for assuring safe and healthful working conditions and for developing standards of safety and health.
 Agricultural Centers program (U07/CCU012926), and the EPA/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Child Health Center program (R826886/PO1ES09601). Contents are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official view of these agencies.

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.
Table 1. Characteristics of populations in five Washington
State studies with cross-sectional sampling design.

                                Collection               Sample
              Location          period                   size (n)

Applicator    Wenatchee         May-Jul 1995             72
children      Valley

Seattle
metro         Seattle           May-Jun 1998             110
children      metro area        Oct 1998

Farmworker    Yakima
children      Valley            Jul-Oct 1999             211

Adult         Yakima
farmworkers   Valley            Jul-Oct 1999             213

              Samples           Age
              collected         (years)

Applicator    137               2-6
children

Seattle
metro         207               2-5
children

Farmworker
children      211 (a)           2-6

Adult
farmworkers   213               [greater than
                                or equal to]
                                19

              Relation to
              agricultural      Sampling time
              production        frame

Applicator    Parent works      During active
children      as a pesticide    spray season
              applicator
Seattle
metro         None              NA
children

Farmworker    Household         Most samples
children      member works      collected
              as fieldworker    during
              of applicator     nonspray season

Adult         Employed as a     Most samples collected
farmworkers   field worker or   during nonspray season
              pesticide
              applicator

NA, not applicable.

(a) Each of these samples represents a composite of equal
volumes of two or three individual voids, each separated
by a minimum of 3 days and all collected within a 2-week period.

Table 2. Characteristics of populations in five Washington
State studies with repeated-measures sampling design.

                   Location        Collection       Sample
                                   period           size (n)

Apple thinners     Wenatchee       May-Jul 1994     20
                   Valley

Farm community     Wenatchee       May-Jul 1998     44
  children         Valley          Jun-Aug 1999
  (spray season)

Farm community     Wenatchee       Dec 1997-        44
  children         Valley          Apr 1998
  (nonspray                        Aug 1998-
  season)                          May 1999

                   Samples         Age
                   collected       (years)

Apple thinners     293             [greater
                                   than or
                                   equal
                                   to] 19

Farm community     274             2-5
  children
  (spray season)

Farm community     694             2-5
  children
  (nonspray
  season)

                   Relation to
                   agricultural    Sampling
                   production      time frame

Apple thinners     Employed as     During active
                   an apple        spray season
                   thinner

Farm community     Reside in an    During active
  children         agricultural    spray season
  (spray season)   community

Farm community     Reside          During active
  children         in an           spray season
  (nonspray        agricultural
  season)          community

Table 3. Urinary DMTP concentrations ([micro]g/L) for participants
from three cross-sectional Washington State studies and NHANES III
data for children 6-11 years of age in the general U.S. population.

                                  Percentile

Population            25th    50th    75th     90th

Adult farmworkers       3.3     10        32     99
Applicator children     8.2     25        44    110
Farmworker children     2.4    5.8        13     33
Seattle children        2.4    6.1        17     29
NHANES (a) children
  6-11 years old      < LOD    4.1        20     40
NHANES (a)
  Mexican
  Americans           < LOD    2.0        10     38

                              Percentile

Population            95th    97th   Maximum

Adult farmworkers       180    250     2,000
Applicator children     130    180       220
Farmworker children      50     57       140
Seattle children         39     42        60
NHANES (a) children
  6-11 years old         62    --        --
NHANES (a)
  Mexican
  Americans             130    --        --

--, data not reported.

(a) Reported by CDC (2003).

Table 4. Statistical analysis of differences in urinary
DMTP concentrations between populations.

                        Population with higher exposure

Comparison       Adult          Applicator        Farmworker
population     farmworkers        children          children

Applicator
children     p = 0.02 (a, b)         --                --

Farmworker
children       p = 0.0001      p < 0.0001 (a)          --

Seattle
children       p = 0.0021      p < 0.0001 (a)         No
                                                  significant
                                                difference (a,d)

(a) Mann-Whitney U-test for independent samples.

(b) Applicator children had higher DMTP levels
than did adult farmworkers (p= 0.02), but this
difference was not considered significant
because of multiple comparisons (Bonferroni
adjustment; p < 0.008 necessary for significance).

(c) Wilcoxon signed-rank test for paired samples.

(d) DMTP levels for Seattle children and
farmworker children were not different (p=0.73).

Table 5. Composite DMAP concentrations (nmol/L) for Seattle
metropolitan area children, Yakima Valley farmworker children,
and NHANES III children 6-11 years of age.

                                   Percentile

Population            No.   25th    50th     75th   90th   95th

Seattle children      110    63    117 (b)   250    453    545
Farmworker children   211    50    87 (b)    174    378    522
NHANES (a)            471    23      91      270    460    679

(a) Data from Barr et al. (2004, Table 4) .
(b) Significantly different, Mann-Whitney U-test, p=0.007.

Table 6. Arithemetic mean urinary DMTP concentrations
([micro]/L) for participants in repeated-measures studies.

                            Percentile (a)

Population       25th   50th   75th   95th    Maximum

Apple thinners   310    530    610    1,100   1,100

Farm community
  children
  (spray
  season)         5.5    7.8     14      84     180

Farm community
  children
  (nonspray
  season)         3.8    5.5    9.5      18     45

(a) Percentiles of arithmetic means of repeated measures
for individuals in study population.

Figure 3. Median pesticide concentrations in house
dust from households with agricultural workers in
Washington State, 1992-1999. Data for 1992 from
Simcox et al. (1995); for 1995 from Lu et al. (2000);
for 1999 from Curl et al. (2002).

Study year    Median concentration in house dust (ng/g)

                     Azinphosmethyl      Phosmet

1992                 1,100               519
1995                 1,000               140
1999                   530                20

Note: Table made from bar graph.
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Title Annotation:Research / Children's Health
Author:Kissel, John C.
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:7276
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