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Exposures among pregnant women near the World Trade Center site on 11 September 2001.


We have characterized environmental exposures among 187 women who were pregnant, were at or near the World Trade Center (WTC WTC World Trade Center, see there ) on or soon after 11 September 2001, and are enrolled in a prospective cohort study A cohort study is a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science. It is one type of study design.

In medicine, it is usually undertaken to obtain evidence to try to refute the existence of a suspected association between cause and disease; failure to refute
 of health effects. Exposures were assessed by estimating time spent in five zones around the WTC and by developing an exposure index (HI) based on plume reconstruction modeling. The daily reconstructed re·con·struct  
tr.v. re·con·struct·ed, re·con·struct·ing, re·con·structs
1. To construct again; rebuild.

2.
 dust levels were correlated with levels of particulate matter particulate matter
n. Abbr. PM
Material suspended in the air in the form of minute solid particles or liquid droplets, especially when considered as an atmospheric pollutant.

Noun 1.
 < 2.5 pm in aerodynamic diameter Drug particles for pulmonary delivery are typically characterized by aerodynamic diameter rather than geometric diameter. The velocity at which the drug settles is proportional to the aerodynamic diameter, da.  (P[M.sub.2.5]; r = 0.68) or P[M.sub.10] (r = 0.73-0.93) reported from 26 September through 8 October 2001 at four of six sites near the WTC whose data we examined. Biomarkers were measured in a subset. Most (71%) of these women were located within eight blocks of the WTC at 0900 hr on 11 September, and 12 women were in one of the two WTC towers. Daily His were determined to be highest immediately after 11 September and became much lower but remained highly variable over the next 4 weeks. The weekly summary EI was associated strongly with women's perception of air quality from week 2 to week 4 after the collapse (p < 0.0001). The highest levels of polycyclic polycyclic

having two or more usually fused chemical ring structures in their molecule.


polycyclic hydrocarbons
thyroid initiators, i.e. they increase the incidence of thyroid tumors.
 aromatic aromatic /ar·o·mat·ic/ (ar?o-mat´ik)
1. having a spicy odor.

2. in chemistry, denoting a compound containing a ring system stabilized by a closed circle of conjugated double bonds or nonbonding electron pairs, e.g.
 hydrocarbon-deoxyribonucleic acid (PAH-DNA) adducts were seen among women whose blood was collected sooner after 11 September, but levels showed no significant associations with EI or other potential WTC exposure sources. Lead and cobalt in urine were weakly weak·ly  
adj. weak·li·er, weak·li·est
Delicate in constitution; frail or sickly.

adv.
1. With little physical strength or force.

2. With little strength of character.
 correlated with [SIGMA]EI, but not among samples collected closest to 11 September. Plasma OC levels were low. The median polychlorinated biphenyl polychlorinated biphenyl or PCB, any of a group of organic compounds originally widely used in industrial processes but later found to be dangerous environmental pollutants.  level (sum of congeners 118, 138, 153, 180) was 84 ng/g lipid lipid

Any of a diverse class of organic compounds, found in all living things, that are greasy and insoluble in water. One of the three large classes of substances in foods and living cells, lipids contain more than twice as much energy (calories) per unit of weight as the
 and had a nonsignificant non·sig·nif·i·cant  
adj.
1. Not significant.

2. Having, producing, or being a value obtained from a statistical test that lies within the limits for being of random occurrence.
 positive association with [SIGMA]EI (p > 0,05). 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-Heptachlorodibenzodioxin levels (median, 30 pg/g lipid) were similar to levels reported in WTC-exposed firefighters but were not associated with EI. This report indicates intense bystander by·stand·er  
n.
A person who is present at an event without participating in it.


bystander
Noun

a person present but not involved; onlooker; spectator

Noun 1.
 exposure after the WTC collapse and provides information about nonoccupational exposures among a vulnerable population of pregnant women. Key words: dust, exposure index, metal, PAH PAH, PAHA aminohippuric acid.

PAH
abbr.
para-aminohippuric acid


PAH 1 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, see there 2. Pulmonary artery HTN
, particulate par·tic·u·late
adj.
Of or occurring in the form of fine particles.

n.
A particulate substance.



particulate

composed of separate particles.
, PBDE PBDE Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether
PBDE Pentabromodiphenyl Ether (flame retardant additive in plastics)
PBDE Parallel Block-Decodable Encoder
, PCB PCB: see polychlorinated biphenyl.
PCB
 in full polychlorinated biphenyl

Any of a class of highly stable organic compounds prepared by the reaction of chlorine with biphenyl, a two-ring compound.
, polychlorinated dibenzodioxins, polychlorinated dibenzofurans, pregnant, WTC, WTC plume. Environ Health Perspect 113:739-748 (2005). doi:10.1289/ehp.7694 available via http://dx.doi.org/[Online 10 February 2005]

**********

Depending on the World Trade Center (WTC) source characteristics and the date after 11 September 2001, emissions from the WTC site during September 2001 through early 2002 affected lower Manhattan Lower Manhattan is the southernmost part of the island of Manhattan, the main island and center of business and government of the City of New York. Lower Manhattan is generally defined as the area delineated on the north by Chambers Street, on the west by the Hudson River (North  as well as immediately adjacent areas in Brooklyn and New Jersey. Environmental and personal air monitoring, dust analyses, and biomonitoring have identified that dust and air particulates and fibers, alkaline alkaline /al·ka·line/ (al´kah-lin) (-lin)
1. having the reactions of an alkali.

2. having a pH greater than 7.0.


al·ka·line
adj.
1.
 dust, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
n.
Any of a class of carcinogenic organic molecules that consist of three or more rings containing carbon and hydrogen and that are commonly produced by fossil fuel combustion.
 (PAHs) were greatly elevated in the first days after 11 September, with some contaminants remaining above background for 1-3 months (Lioy et al. 2002, in press; McGee et al. 2003; Swartz et at. 2003). Higher atmospheric levels, compared with contemporaneous con·tem·po·ra·ne·ous  
adj.
Originating, existing, or happening during the same period of time: the contemporaneous reigns of two monarchs. See Synonyms at contemporary.
 or pre-11 September measures in mid-Manhattan, have been found for a number of chemicals, including volatile hydrocarbons hydrocarbons (hīˈ·drō·kärˑ·bnz),
n.
 (benzene benzene (bĕn`zēn, bĕnzēn`), colorless, flammable, toxic liquid with a pleasant aromatic odor. It boils at 80.1°C; and solidifies at 5.5°C;. Benzene is a hydrocarbon, with formula C6H6. , xylene xylene (zī`lēn) or dimethylbenzene (dī'mĕthəlbĕn`zēn), C6H4(CH3)2 , tetrachloroethylene tetrachloroethylene /tet·ra·chlo·ro·eth·y·lene/ (tet?rah-klor?o-eth´i-len) a moderately toxic chlorinated hydrocarbon used as a dry-cleaning solvent and for other industrial uses. ), metals [lead (Pb), antimony antimony (ăn`tĭmō'nē) [Lat. antimoneum], semimetallic chemical element; symbol Sb [Lat. stibium,=a mark]; at. no. 51; at. wt. 121.75; m.p. 630.74°C;; b.p. 1,750°C;; sp. gr. (metallic form) 6.  (Sb)], and semi- and nonvolatile chlorinated hydrocarbons chlorinated hydrocarbons

insecticidal substances which are no longer recommended for use on food animals because of their persistence in animal tissues and entry into the human food chain. Many of them still find industrial and nonanimal use and poisoning of animals can occur.
 [e.g., polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDF PCDF Polychlorinated Dibenzofurans
PCDF Polychlorodibenzofuran
PCDF People Centered Development Forum
)] (Lioy et al. 2002; Offenberg et al. 2003). Individual exposures have been assessed among firefighters and construction workers who were working close to the site on and after 11 September (Edelman et al. 2003). However, bystander exposures have not been described, although adverse health effects have been reported (Trout et at. 2002). Air-monitoring data for both particulate mass (e.g., Figure 1) and PAHs (Landrigan et al. 2004; Thurston et at. 2003) showed elevations within the first month after 11 September, with intermittent intermittent /in·ter·mit·tent/ (-mit´ent) marked by alternating periods of activity and inactivity.

in·ter·mit·tent
adj.
1. Stopping and starting at intervals.

2.
 excursions after that time ascribed to meterologic conditions as well as operational changes at the site (Dalton Dalton, city (1990 pop. 21,761), seat of Whitfield co., extreme NW Ga., in the Appalachian valley; inc. 1847. It is a highly industrialized city in a farm area.  2003).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

We have characterized and estimated WTC-related exposures among 187 women who were pregnant and were at or near the WTC on 11 September or within the subsequent 3 weeks. A preliminary report on birth outcomes in this group has been published (Berkowitz et al. 2003b).

Materials and Methods

In 2002, we established a prospective epidemiologic study 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  of 187 women who were pregnant and located within or near the WTC on or about 11 September. The great majority of the women recruited to this study were self-referred on the basis of extensive media publicity surrounding our investigation. Additional participants were located by sending letters to nearly 3,000 obstetricians in the greater New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 area, distributing flyers in lower Manhattan, and advertising in local newspapers. Eligibility criteria were pregnancy on 11 September 2001 or shortly thereafter and presence in one of five "exposure" zones at or near the WTC at 0900 hr (n = 170) on that day or within the next 3 weeks (n = 17). The five exposure zones were a) the area including and surrounding the WTC site bordered by Murray Street Murray Street may refer to:
  • Murray Street (album) by Sonic Youth, a band from New York City
  • Murray Street, Perth, Western Australia
  • Murray Street, New York City
  • Murray Street, Singapore
  • Murray Street, Ottawa
 (north), Nassau Street Nassau Street could refer to several different locations:
  • Nassau Street (Dublin) – a street in Dublin, Ireland.
  • Nassau Street (Winnipeg) – a street in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
  • Nassau Street (Princeton) – a street in Princeton, New Jersey.
 (east), the Battery (south), and the Hudson River Hudson River

River, New York, U.S. Originating in the Adirondack Mountains and flowing for about 315 mi (507 km) to New York City, it was named for Henry Hudson, who explored it in 1609. Dutch settlement of the Hudson valley began in 1629.
 (west); b) the area of Manhattan south of Chambers Street Chambers Street is a street in Edinburgh, Scotland, at south of the Old Town. The street is named after William Chambers of Glenormiston, the Lord Provost of Edinburgh who was the main proponent of the 1867 Edinburgh Improvement Act, which gave permission for the street's  excluding zone 1; c) south of Canal Street Canal Street may refer to:
  • Canal Street (Manchester), England, UK
  • Canal Street, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
  • Canal Street (Manhattan), New York City, New York, USA
 and north of Chambers Street; d) Brooklyn Heights; and e) the easternmost part of New Jersey across the Hudson River from the WTC (Figure 2). The women were evenly distributed (28-34%) for trimester trimester /tri·mes·ter/ (-mes´ter) a period of three months.

tri·mes·ter
n.
A period of three months.


Trimester
The first third or 13 weeks of pregnancy.
 of pregnancy on 11 September.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

We used questionnaires and a time--activity log to help characterize exposures from 11 September through 8 October 2001. The questionnaire included items on sociodemographic characteristics; medical and pregnancy history; employment; potential home, work, and food exposures to PAHs (i.e., grilled foods and cigarette smoke); evacuation on 11 September through the dust and debris; perception of air quality (PAQ PAQ Position Analysis Questionnaire
PAQ Previously Asked Questions
PAQ Plan d'Action Qualité
PAQ Palace Acquire (intern; USAF)
PAQ Project Assessment Quotation
PAQ Process Average Quality
) after 11 September; and presence of WTC dust in the home. The time-activity log recorded all the time spent indoors and outdoors at any distinct street address in one of five zones around the WTC for 4 weeks after 11 September (Figure 2). These zones were defined by five different areas at increasing distances from WTC, which represented likely high exposures to emissions and dust depending on the location and intensity of the WTC plume (emissions) and dust impact areas. The time spent outside any of the five zones was not recorded but could be computed by subtraction subtraction, fundamental operation of arithmetic; the inverse of addition. If a and b are real numbers (see number), then the number ab is that number (called the difference) which when added to b (the subtractor) equals . In separate analyses, no differences in exposure patterns were seen between indoors and outdoors, so we used total time spent in the exposure analyses. The time-activity logs were geocoded using ArcGIS software (ESRI (Environmental Systems Research Institute, Inc., Redlands, CA, www.esri.com) The world's leading developer of geographic information systems (GIS) software, including programs that plot ZIP codes and addresses, demographic information and detailed, color-coded data. , Inc., Redlands, CA) based on each street address and daily time spent within these zones.

Beginning in February 2002, we obtained blood and urine specimens from 178 women, 55 of whom were in the third trimester Noun 1. third trimester - time period extending from the 28th week of gestation until delivery
trimester - a period of three months; especially one of the three three-month periods into which human pregnancy is divided
 of pregnancy (the remainder had delivered), to determine levels of PAH-DNA adducts and other biomarkers of exposure. For 160 samples, DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 was successfully obtained from mononuclear mononuclear /mono·nu·cle·ar/ (-noo´kle-er)
1. having but one nucleus.

2. a cell having a single nucleus, especially a monocyte of the blood or tissues.


mon·o·nu·cle·ar
adj.
 cells by standard RNase and proteinase proteinase /pro·tein·ase/ (pro´ten-as?) endopeptidase.

pro·tein·ase
n.
A protease that begins the hydrolytic breakdown of proteins usually by splitting them into polypeptide chains.
 K treatment and phenol/chloroform extraction. Mononuclear cells have higher adducts than do granulocytes Granulocytes
White blood cells.

Mentioned in: Blood Donation and Registry

granulocytes (granˑ·y
 (Jahnke et al. 1990; Savela and Hemminki 1991), and thus this method should allow detection of adducts in women who were most heavily exposed to WTC fire emissions or dust. The half-life of PAH-DNA adducts in total white blood cells White blood cells
A group of several cell types that occur in the bloodstream and are essential for a properly functioning immune system.

Mentioned in: Abscess Incision & Drainage, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Complement Deficiencies
 has been reported to be 3-5 months (Mooney et al. 1995), and the half-life of adducts in mononuclear cells should be no shorter than in total white blood cells. PAH-DNA adducts were measured by a competitive ELISA ELISA (e-li´sah) Enzyme-Linked Immuno-Sorbent Assay; any enzyme immunoassay using an enzyme-labeled immunoreactant and an immunosorbent.

ELISA
n.
 with chemiluminescence chemiluminescence /chemi·lu·mi·nes·cence/ (kem?i-loo?mi-nes´ens) luminescence produced by direct transformation of chemical energy into light energy.  end-point detection (Divi et al. 2002). Results were the average of triplicate measurements. For 7% of samples with sufficient DNA, samples were reassayed. Repeat analysis of three positive controls resulted in a coefficient of variation Coefficient of Variation

A measure of investment risk that defines risk as the standard deviation per unit of expected return.
 of 22%. Samples with inhibition < 20% were considered nondetectable. 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. ) was approximately 40 adducts per million nucleotides (40 apmn), based on 20% inhibition and 10 [micro]g DNA assayed per well. PAH-DNA adducts were categorized 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
 as below the LOD, < 60 apmn (median of detectable adducts), [greater than or equal to] 60 apmn, and > 100 apmn. This upper category was derived from a plot showing a marked shift in the cumulative distribution at this level (> 92%).

In a randomly selected subset of 100 women, the 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
) determined that these women had metals in urine and blood and organochlorines organochlorines

see chlorinated hydrocarbons.


organochlorines poisoning
cause excitement and irritability, tremor, ataxia, weakness, paralysis, convulsions.
 [OCs; included 40 polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  (PCBs), 7 polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs), 10 PCDFs, and 8 polybrominated diphenylethers (PBDEs) in plasma. Random selection was done by assigning a random number obtained using the SAS (1) (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, www.sas.com) A software company that specializes in data warehousing and decision support software based on the SAS System. Founded in 1976, SAS is one of the world's largest privately held software companies. See SAS System.  function (SAS Institute SAS Institute Inc., headquartered in Cary, North Carolina, USA, has been a major producer of software since it was founded in 1976 by Anthony Barr, James Goodnight, John Sall and Jane Helwig. , Inc., Cary, NC) to all 187 women, sorting on the random number, and choosing the first 100 women. Metals were measured in whole blood and urine using published methods (Date and Gray 1989; Guo and Baasner 1993; Nixon et al. 1999; Paschal et al. 1998). OCs and PBDEs were analyzed using high-resolution gas chromatography/isotope-dilution high-resolution mass spectrometry mass spectrometry
 or mass spectroscopy

Analytic technique by which chemical substances are identified by sorting gaseous ions by mass using electric and magnetic fields.
 (Patterson et al. 1991; Sjodin et al. 2004). Serum total lipids lipids, a broad class of organic products found in living systems. Most are insoluble in water but soluble in nonpolar solvents. The definition excludes the mineral oils and other petroleum products obtained from fossil material.  were calculated using the values for triglycerides Triglycerides
Fatty compounds synthesized from carbohydrates during the process of digestion and stored in the body's adipose (fat) tissues. High levels of triglycerides in the blood are associated with insulin resistance.
 and cholesterol assayed with an enzymatic method (Akins et al. 1989). Urinary 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 assayed using a kit from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). The median was 0.43 g/L, and the maximum 1.9 g/L; two values were < 0.01 g/L. Urine metals are presented uncorrected to allow comparison with previously reported data, but adjustment for creatinine was done in multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model.  models by including it as a covariate.

Limits of detection for each 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.
 are given in each table in "Results." For metals and PBDE, laboratory values were censored cen·sor  
n.
1. A person authorized to examine books, films, or other material and to remove or suppress what is considered morally, politically, or otherwise objectionable.

2.
 at the LOD. In parametric analyses, we substituted the value LOD/[square root of 2] for unreported metal levels. Because we focused on OCs with levels above the LOD in > 50% of the samples, univariate analyses of OC concentrations [four PCBs ([SIGMA]PCB4), two PCDDs, and two PCDFs] changed very little whether LOD values were assigned a censored value (LOD/[square root of 2]) or the actual value was reported. However, the measures of central tendency for concentrations of [SIGMA]PCB4/total PCBs were influenced by choice of surrogate surrogate n. 1) a person acting on behalf of another or a substitute, including a woman who gives birth to a baby of a mother who is unable to carry the child. 2) a judge in some states (notably New York) responsible only for probates, estates, and adoptions.  value for the LOD. Few samples had [SIGMA]PCB4 congeners below the LOD, but many samples had values below the LOD for other PCBs. As a result, the [SIGMA]PCB4:total PCB ratio decreased artificially when a surrogate value (LOD/[square root of 2]) was used. The mean [SIGMA]PCB4:total PCB ratio increased by 40% and the median by 50% when using LOD/[square root of 2] rather than zero or the actual value below the LOD. Therefore, we used the actual values (which were all positive) or the lowest positive value (to avoid zeroes) of congeners for the sum of PCBs (see discussion and citations in Berkowitz et al. 2003a; Fitzgerald et al. 2004). We could not use this approach for PBDEs because the lowest positive value was usually higher than the lowest reported LOD value. Therefore, because individual LOD values were given, we used the median LOD of all samples and substituted the median LOD/[square root of 2] for LOD samples in parametric analyses.

A daily dust exposure index (EI) was estimated for each woman. The EI each day was derived by reconstruction of the post-11 September WTC plume. The Computational Chemodynamics Laboratory (a research unit of the Exposure Measurement and Assessment Division of the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, University of Medicine and Dentistry dentistry, treatment and care of the teeth and associated oral structures. Dentistry is mainly concerned with tooth decay, disease of the supporting structures, such as the gums, and faulty positioning of the teeth.  New Jersey) developed simulations of the plume that was generated by the collapse of the WTC buildings and the subsequent fires at the site (Huber et al. 2004).

The plume reconstruction was obtained by generating a set of simulations that were the result of employing the Regional Atmospheric Modeling Atmospheric model is constructed around the full set of primitive dynamical equations which govern atmospheric motions, and supplements these equations with optional parameterizations for turbulent diffusion, solar and terrestrial radiation, moist processes including the formation  System (RAMS)/Hybrid Particle and Concentration Transport (HYPACT HYPACT Hybrid Particle and Concentration Transport Model ) model, which is employed as part of the Modeling Environment for Total Risk (MENTOR) developed by the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute. The RAMS/HYPACT model was used to reconstruct re·con·struct  
tr.v. re·con·struct·ed, re·con·struct·ing, re·con·structs
1. To construct again; rebuild.

2.
 the atmospheric dispersion dispersion, in chemistry
dispersion, in chemistry, mixture in which fine particles of one substance are scattered throughout another substance. A dispersion is classed as a suspension, colloid, or solution.
 of "generic" particulate matter (PM) emitted from the location of the WTC. This simulation employed a triple-nested modeling domain of 4 x 4 km (grid 1), 1 x 1 km (grid 2), and 250 x 250 m (grid 3) resolutions. The RAMS/HYPACT results were averaged over time to produce 8-hr concentrations for five zones across lower Manhattan, Brooklyn, and New Jersey. A source decay factor was incorporated into each 8-hr concentration average estimate, corresponding to a sigmoidal sig·moid   also sig·moi·dal
adj.
1. Having the shape of the letter S.

2. Of or relating to the sigmoid colon.



[Greek s
 weakening function. This was done to simulate the decrease in the intensity of the fires and other emission sources during the days after 11 September.

The RAMS/HYPACT model accounts for advection ad·vec·tion  
n.
1. The transfer of a property of the atmosphere, such as heat, cold, or humidity, by the horizontal movement of an air mass:
, convection, and dispersion of emissions after the collapse of the towers, but is not constructed to model the initial wave of dust and debris. A geographic information system geographic information system (GIS)

Computerized system that relates and displays data collected from a geographic entity in the form of a map. The ability of GIS to overlay existing data with new information and display it in colour on a computer screen is used primarily to
 (GIS (1) (Geographic Information System) An information system that deals with spatial information. Often called "mapping software," it links attributes and characteristics of an area to its geographic location. )-based database developed by the 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  [EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
; U.S. Geological Survey The term geological survey can be used to describe both the conduct of a survey for geological purposes and an institution holding geological information.

A geological survey
 (USGS USGS United States Geological Survey (US Department of the Interior) ) 2001] from over-flight photos and satellite images provides approximate boundaries of dust/debris, allowing characterization of the extent of the area of deposition from the collapse of the WTC buildings (U.S. EPA 2002; USGS 2001). The GIS data were superimposed su·per·im·pose  
tr.v. su·per·im·posed, su·per·im·pos·ing, su·per·im·pos·es
1. To lay or place (something) on or over something else.

2.
 on the zones of concern to determine the relative impact of the dust and debris wave for use in the development of the EI for 11 September. The available images show that the dust/debris field completely covered zones 1 and 2 from 11 through 13 September 2001. During this same time period, zone 3 was also heavily covered to an area within 300 feet of zone 2 boundaries. Most remaining suspended dust was settled and/or washed away after a rain event on 14 September. For zone 1, zone 2 and the first 300 feet within zone 3 (nearest the zone 2 boundary), the airborne concentrations from resuspended dust/debris on 11 through 13 September were estimated to be approximately equal to two-thirds of the maximum plume concentration. In the remainder of zone 3, this estimate was one-third of the maximum plume concentration (in each case, the maximum plume concentration is the maximum of the 8-hr average). These weighting factors were derived from visual inspection/interpretation of the available images of the WTC plume and debris and the relative intensity of plume and dust.

Reflecting the RAMS/HYPACT model start time of 0900 Eastern Daylight Savings Time, only two 8-hr averages exist for 11 September. Therefore, the total number of hours per person was set to be [less than or equal to] 16 for 11 September. Because the time-activity diary for an individual does not include the specific hours spent in a particular zone in a particular day, the data sets cannot be used to directly estimate exposure based on the time of day. As a result, the daily average plume density in each zone was combined with the time--activity diary entries (i.e., time spent in each zone) to develop an average EI.

The EI accounts for time spent both indoors and outdoors. Various indoor/outdoor (I/O (Input/Output) The transfer of data between the CPU and a peripheral device. Every transfer is an output from one device and an input to another. See PC input/output.

I/O - Input/Output
) concentration penetration factors have been reported and used for microenvironmental models. These values typically range from 0.05 to 0.9 (Burke et al. 2001; Thornburg et al. 2001; Vette et al. 2001). To account for the type of building ventilation system ventilation system Public health An air system designed to maintain negative pressure and exhaust air properly, to minimize the spread of TB and other respiratory pathogens in a health care facility  (residential/nonresidential) and a particle size Particle size, also called grain size, refers to the diameter of individual grains of sediment, or the lithified particles in clastic rocks. The term may also be applied to other granular materials.  range, an I:O ratio value of 0.15 was used.

The EI was calculated for 187 women for 11 September and each of the 27 days immediately thereafter. Because the exact emission amount resulting from the WTC collapse is unknown, a hypothetical unit pollutant pol·lut·ant
n.
Something that pollutes, especially a waste material that contaminates air, soil, or water.
 release rate was used in the RAMS/HYPACT simulation. The simulation with a unit release provides the relative "normalized" concentration of airborne contaminants airborne contaminants,
n.pl materials in the atmosphere that can affect the health of persons in the same or a nearby environment. Also referred to as
air pollution.
 at different locations. These calculations result in a dimensionless EI. Because the values are relative, identical EIs on different days may not represent exactly equivalent daily exposures. However, the potential misclassification was small enough to justify their summation summation n. the final argument of an attorney at the close of a trial in which he/she attempts to convince the judge and/or jury of the virtues of the client's case. (See: closing argument) . This was shown by the correlation of the daily median EI with EPA PM monitoring data at four sites (see Results). In addition, for most women, their exposure sums were dominated by the value on 11 September or on a few other days with very high readings, because of the logarithmic logarithmic

pertaining to logarithm.


logarithmic relationship
when the logs of two variables plotted against each other create a straight line.
 nature of the EI distribution. Therefore, for the purposes of estimating total exposure, the indoor and outdoor EIs have been summed over certain time periods, with [SIGMA]EI being the 28-day (4-week) sum. If additional monitoring data become available from ongoing data analyses, the current EIs can be analyzed to determine if there is reason to improve the estimates and more accurately calibrate To adjust or bring into balance. Scanners, CRTs and similar peripherals may require periodic adjustment. Unlike digital devices, the electronic components within these analog devices may change from their original specification. See color calibration and tweak.  the EIs.

Statistical analyses were conducted using Microsoft (Redmond, WA) Excel and SAS PC (version 9; SAS Institute Inc.). The EIs were explored as continuous variables [daily values, weekly sums, and 28-day total ([SIGMA]EI) for each woman] and as quantiles (dichotomized at the median). The significance of associations among categorical That which is unqualified or unconditional.

A categorical imperative is a rule, command, or moral obligation that is absolutely and universally binding.

Categorical is also used to describe programs limited to or designed for certain classes of people.
 variables was assessed by chi-square analysis, using the Fisher exact test and the Mantel-Haenszel test for trend where appropriate. Because the exposure variables were not normally distributed, nonparametric methods (Wilcoxon rank-sum test and Kruskal-Wallis test) were used to test for differences in the medians between groups. Spearman spear·man  
n.
A man, especially a soldier, armed with a spear.
 correlations ([r.sub.s]) were used to examine associations between continuous variables. In addition, we used multivariate analyses to predict biomarker levels of those analytes that demonstrated any association with [SIGMA]EI [Pb, mercury, octachlorodibenzodioxin (OCDD OCDD Office for Citizens with Developmental Disabilities (Louisiana State Department of Health and Hospitals)
OCDD 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9-Octachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
OCDD Orthonormal Code Diversity Detection
), [SIGMA]PCB4]. For these models, the log-transformed biomarker level was the dependent variable, and the independent variables were EI (dichotomized below or above the median [SIGMA]EI) and factors that might potentially affect selected biomarkers (age, body mass index, pregnancy at blood draw, breast-feeding breast-feeding /breast-feed·ing/ (brest´fed?ing) nursing; the feeding of an infant at the mother's breast. , smoking, race, and fish intake). We used the general linear models program (PROC (language) PROC - The job control language used in the Pick operating system.

["Exploring the Pick Operating System", J.E. Sisk et al, Hayden 1986].
 GLM GLM Global Language Monitor
GLM Global Marine (stock symbol)
GLM Graduated Length Method (ski instruction)
GLM Good Looking Mom (used in pediatric practices)
GLM God Loves Me
) in SAS with the LSMEANS option to determine whether the biomarker level differed significantly by [SIGMA]EI (below vs. above the median).

Results

Within this cohort of pregnant women, most participants were located north and southeast of the WTC in zones 1-3 at 0900 hr on 11 September (Figure 2). Most women (133 of 187, 71%) were located within eight blocks (zones 1 and 2), including 12 women who were in a WTC tower or the complex underneath. The locations of participants at 0900 hr on 11 September were 40.6% in zone 1, 30.5% in zone 2, 17.6% in zone 3, 1.6% in zone 4, 0.5% in zone 5, and 9.1% who were not there but who re-entered the area within the succeeding weeks.

Regardless of their exact location at 0900 hr on 11 September, most women either lived or worked in zones 1-5 before 11 September (33 women both lived and worked there, 38 lived there, and 113 worked there; 3 neither worked nor lived there). Therefore, although we do not have data on average time spent in these zones before 11 September, it is likely to be much higher than the durations reported in the 4 weeks after 11 September. As shown in Figure 3A, women reported spending little time in zones 1-3 immediately after 11 September, with time spent gradually increasing thereafter, with notable dips on the weekends. During the first week after 11 September, 37% of women spent some time in zones 1-3, and the percentage rose over the next 3 weeks (42, 61, and 70%). During the month after 11 September, women spent more time in zones 2 and 3 than in zone 1, which was quite inaccessible inaccessible Surgery adjective Unreachable; referring to a lesion that unmanageable by standard surgical techniques–eg, lesions deep in the brain or adjacent to vital structures–ie, not accessible. See Accessible.  at this time. The average duration in zone 3 was 1.2 hr/day in the week immediately after 11 September, rising gradually to 3.3 hr/day for the third work week (Monday through Friday) after 11 September (mean hours per day by zone are shown in Figure 3A); time spent in zones 1 and 2 was similar in later weeks but lower than in zone 3 in the early weeks. Over the same period, average time in zone 1 was 0.2 hr/day in week 1 and 1.2 hr/day in week 3. Patterns of time spent in zones 1-5 did not differ materially with regard to whether women lived and/or worked in lower Manhattan.

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]

In contrast to the increasing time spent in zones 1-3, the relative dust concentrations within the five zones declined rapidly during the 28 days after 11 September (Figure 3B). However, marked fluctuations in the dust and emission levels existed, consistent with changing construction, traffic, and weather patterns over this period (Dalton 2003; Landrigan et al. 2004). The individual EIs in Figure 3C were computed by combining individual-level data of the type shown in Figures 3A and B. The daily EIs exhibit a steep decline during the 3 days after 11 September, lower values during the weekends after that, and a slight shift toward increasing levels (but well below those of the first 3 days) in weeks 3 and 4, consistent with the reported time spent in zones close to the WTC in Figure 3A. The daily relative dust levels in zone 1 (Figure 3B) were correlated with PM concentrations at four stations close to the WTC that monitored PM after 22 September 2001 (Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions.  2003) [Chambers Street: PM [less than or equal to] 10 [micro]m in aerodynamic diameter (P[M.sub.10]), r = 0.91; PM [less than or equal to] 2.5 [micro]m in aerodynamic diameter (P[M.sub.2.5]), r = 0.93; 290 West Broadway: P[M.sub.10], r = 0.73; West Broadway-Park Place: P[M.sub.2.5], r = 0.68; n = 7-15 per site]. Using the models of reported PM data tested for performance against daily EI (Figure 3B), we estimated the daily median P[M.sub.2.5] or P[M.sub.10] levels in zone 1 by extrapolation (mathematics, algorithm) extrapolation - A mathematical procedure which estimates values of a function for certain desired inputs given values for known inputs.

If the desired input is outside the range of the known values this is called extrapolation, if it is inside then
 to have been > 1,000 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] on 11 September and > 100 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] from 12 September though 16 September 2001 in some locations (data not shown).

Sociodemographic factors did not differ by the [SIGMA]EI (28-day total) among participants (Table 1). The cohort has a mean age of 35 years and is largely white, married, highly educated, and nonsmoking non·smok·ing  
adj.
1. Not engaging in the smoking of tobacco: nonsmoking passengers.

2. Designated or reserved for nonsmokers: the nonsmoking section of a restaurant.
. Women who both worked and lived in lower Manhattan on 11 September (n = 33) had a higher [SIGMA]EI than did women who only worked (n = 113), only lived (n = 38), or spent time for other reasons in one of the zones (n = 3) (Table 1). Answers to exposure-related questions about when and where women lived were strongly correlated with [SIGMA]EI, as expected from the congruity con·gru·i·ty  
n. pl. con·gru·i·ties
1. The quality or fact of being congruous.

2. The quality or fact of being congruent.

3. A point of agreement.

Noun 1.
 of these questions with data in the time-activity log (selected exposures are presented in Table 1). Notably, evacuation through the immediate area on 11 September led to a higher [SIGMA]EI. The median day's EI for 11 September was 3.2 among 85 women who evacuated e·vac·u·ate  
v. e·vac·u·at·ed, e·vac·u·at·ing, e·vac·u·ates

v.tr.
1.
a. To empty or remove the contents of.

b. To create a vacuum in.

2.
 through the WTC debris; the 11 September EI was higher among women who remained in the debris for [greater than or equal to] 40 min (median EI, 3.7 on 11 September; n = 40) than among those who stayed for 1-39 min (median EI, 2.6 for 11 September; n = 45) or not at all (median EI, 1.3; n = 102; p < 0.0001). Women who wore dust masks during cleaning also had higher EIs, although the reported presence of dust in the home was not associated with EI.

The pattern of EI versus time as shown in Figure 3C is explored in relation to PAQ in Table 2. Here, in week 1, the 7-day EI sum was not related to PAQ, and this was probably because few women reported spending much time in the area during week 1 (39 of 185, 21%). During weeks 2-4 after 11 September, a strong association was observed between PAQ and weekly EI sum, because women who worked or lived in lower Manhattan returned to the area (Table 2). The association between PAQ and [SIGMA]EI existed for all women in weeks 2-4 and among just those women who reported spending most of their time in zones 1-5 (i.e., 49% in week 2, 69% in week 3, 77% in week 4; n = 39, 92, 127, and 143, respectively).

PAH-DNA adducts were measured in 160 women. Most were nondetectable (88 of 160, 55%); the median of detectable values was 60 apmn. Eleven women had levels higher than 100 apron apron,
n a piece of clothing worn in front of the body for protection.

apron band,
n a labioincisal or gingival extension of an orthodontic band that aids in retention of the band and in proper positioning of the bracket.
, and nine of these women had blood drawn in February or March 2002 (Table 3), a time interval within the reported clearance times clearance time,
n the time taken for a cariogenic exposure to pass from the oral cavity; depends largely upon type of food ingested, efficiency of the lips, teeth, and tongue, and the amount of saliva present in an individual's oral cavity.
 of PAH-DNA adducts from lymphocytes Lymphocytes
Small white blood cells that bear the major responsibility for carrying out the activities of the immune system; they number about 1 trillion.
 (Mooney et al. 1995). Samples collected in February/March had a significantly greater number of detectable PAH adducts (46 apmn; 64%) and a higher median value 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
 (46.7 apmn) compared with later samples (26 apmn, 30%; median, 20.0 apmn; p < 0.0001; Table 3). There were no consistent associations between PAH adducts and EI, when considered overall or by various temporal windows of blood draw and EI weekly sum. Neither [SIGMA]EI nor PAH adducts were associated with dietary intake of foods that may contain PAHs (e.g., broiled broil 1  
v. broiled, broil·ing, broils

v.tr.
1. To cook by direct radiant heat, as over a grill or under an electric element.

2. To expose to great heat.

v.
 meat) or smoking, questions included in the questionnaire for this purpose.

Thirteen urinary metals as well as Pb, cadmium cadmium (kăd`mēəm) [from cadmia, Lat. for calamine, with which cadmium is found associated], metallic chemical element; symbol Cd; at. no. 48; at. wt. 112.41; m.p. 321°C;; b.p. 765°C;; sp. gr. 8. , and Hg in blood were measured in a subset of 100 women. After comparing the percentage detected and the median values of the urinary levels in our data with data from earlier reports (CDC 2003; Edelman et al. 2003), in Table 4 we present findings on urinary Sb, Cd, Pb, and uranium and blood Pb and Cd, for which levels were reported among firefighters exposed at the WTC (Edelman et al. 2003). We also included urinary cobalt because levels were weakly correlated with [SIGMA]EI. We included blood Hg because levels in the women were higher than in the National Health and Examination Study (NHANES NHANES National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (US CDC) ) data and because Hg was reported as a possible WTC site contaminant contaminant /con·tam·i·nant/ (kon-tam´in-int) something that causes contamination.

contaminant

something that causes contamination.
 (Edelman et al. 2003). None of the other urinary metals was associated with [SIGMA]EI, either among all women or among the February-March biospecimen collections. Moreover, the observed correlations with [SIGMA]EI, which were significant among 100 urine samples ([r.sub.s] = 0.20 for Co and 0.21 for Pb; p < 0.05), were not significant among the February-March biospecimens ([r.sub.s] = 0.13 and 0.12, respectively; p > 0.3; n = 44). The median values of four urine metal concentrations in Table 4 were lower than those reported in WTC-exposed or control firefighters (urinary Co was not reported). The medians of Co, Cd, and uranium were lower than among females in the NHANES data (CDC 2003), whereas urinary Pb was higher (Table 4). Blood Cd was significantly correlated with [SIGMA]EI ([r.sub.S] = 0.29, p = 0.01), but the comparison with [SIGMA]EI above and below the median was not significant for any of these (Kruskal-Wallis test). No significant associations of blood metals with exposure were seen among the February-March biospecimens.

Selected organohalogen compounds (40 PCBs, 7 PCDDs, 10 PCDFs, 8 PBDEs) were measured in blood plasma blood plasma
n.
The yellow or gray-yellow, protein-containing fluid portion of blood in which the blood cells and platelets are normally suspended.
 in the same randomly selected subset of 100 women as were the metals. Data on specific PCBs, PCDFs PCDDs, and PBDEs presented in Table 5 were chosen because they were detected in > 50% of our samples, they were reported in WTC debris (PCBs, pentachlorodibenzofuran, PBDEs; Litten et al. 2003; Offenberg et al. 2003), or they were elevated in serum among firefighters (Edelman et al. 2003). PCB and OCDD levels were not significantly higher among women whose [SIGMA]EIs were above the median, and none of the other OCs or PBDEs differed significantly with respect to median [SIGMA]EI. In comparison with other reports, the median heptachlorodibenzodioxin level (30 pg/g) was similar to the adjusted geometric mean (mathematics) geometric mean - The Nth root of the product of N numbers.

If each number in a list of numbers was replaced with their geometric mean, then multiplying them all together would still give the same result.
 reported in exposed firefighters (28 pg/g lipid; Edelman et al. 2003). Heptachlorodibenzofuran levels were higher in exposed firefighters, but no levels were reported. 2,3,4,7,8-Pentachlorodibenzofuran was below the LOD in 59% of our sample. Two other OCs were detectable in > 50% of the women, including 1,2,3,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzodioxin (median, 22 pg/g) and OCDD (median, 224 pg/g); levels were not reported for the firefighters. There were no significant associations between PBDEs and [SIGMA]EI.

We performed multivariate analyses to evaluate the association of analytes that showed some pattern of association with [SIGMA]EI, by computing computing - computer  the geometric means of the biomarker (dichotomized above vs. below the [SIGMA]EI median) adjusted for age, nonwhite non·white  
n.
A person who is not white.



nonwhite adj.
 race, being currently pregnant, breast-feeding, body mass index, and smoking. We also adjusted models for PCBs and Hg for fish intake. We found no significant differences in the adjusted geometric means with regard to dichotomized [SIGMA]EI for PCBs, OCDDs, PBDEs, Pb (blood and urine), Cd, or Hg among all 100 women tested or among the 44 women who donated blood samples in February-March 2002.

Discussion

The predominant air pollutant at the WTC was dust composed of large-size particles (> 10 [micro]m) (Lioy et al. 2002). Air monitoring conducted in the vicinity of the WTC after 25 September 2001 revealed elevated levels of P[M.sub.10] and P[M.sub.2.5] as close as six blocks northeast of the site (Figure 1). Daily P[M.sub.2.5] levels measured five blocks east of the site from 14 September through 16 October 2001 were 15-60 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] (Landrigan et al. 2004). At the end of September 2001, when more air monitoring had commenced, median levels of P[M.sub.2.5] were > 60 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] (one to two blocks away). At Chambers Street (six blocks north-northwest), the median P[M.sub.10] level was 43 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] and the median P[M.sub.2.5] level was 10 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in October 2001. At 290 Broadway (six blocks northeast), the median P[M.sub.2.5] level was 22 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in late September (n = 4 days) and 15 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in October, whereas the median P[M.sub.10] levels were 32 and 30 [micro]g/[m.sup.3], respectively, during those time periods. However, daily excursions of P[M.sub.10] and P[M.sub.2.5] levels near or higher than 100 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] occurred periodically, depending on site operations, weather, and traffic (Columbia University 2003; Dalton 2003; Vette et al. 2001). Some distance away at Canal Street (15 blocks or about 0.7 miles north), levels were lower (median P[M.sub.2.5], 14.3 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in September, 12.5 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in October 2001). At Public School 64 (about 50 blocks northeast), P[M.sub.2.5] levels were 11.2 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in September and 13.8 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in October 2001 (median), which is similar to annual data at Public School 64 (13.5 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in 2001, 12.1 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] in 2002). Women in our cohort in zone 1 were probably exposed to > 100 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] of particulates on 11 through 12 September, based on our extrapolation of levels of P[M.sub.2.5] and P[M.sub.10 ]from the daily EI correlations with the air monitoring data. The U.S. EPA 24-hr standard is 65 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] for P[M.sub.2..5] and 150 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] for P[M.sub.10 ](U.S. EPA 1997).

As the dust exposures in lower Manhattan gradually diminished in weeks 1-4 after 11 September, women gradually returned to that area for longer time periods. Therefore, fluctuation Fluctuation

A price or interest rate change.
 in the daily EIs (Figure 3) reflects personal activity patterns (which increased) as well as well-known changes in pollution sources and pollutant levels in lower Manhattan during this period (Dalton 2003). Consistent with the temporal decline in particulate levels, the median daily EI in our population decreased by 10- to 100-fold over the first few days (Figure 3C). After 14 September 2001, the median of nonzero non·ze·ro  
adj.
Not equal to zero.



nonzero  

Not equal to zero.
 reconstructed daily relative dust levels remained < 0.01 (the nominal detection limit) (Figure 3B). The significant association of EI with questionnaire data on exposure and air quality indicates that personal recollection may be a reasonable way to estimate a person's relative exposure intensity in lower Manhattan after 11 September. For the events of 11 September, these results are reasonable because the magnitude of the changes in pollutant levels by day and by geographic location was large. Therefore, individual exposure to WTC contaminants can be ranked by assessing perceived air pollution as well as information from time-activity logs and GIS-based exposure modeling.

Uncertainties exist in our exposure estimates, including the recall data and the plume reconstruction. We used recall information to derive the GIS time-activity variables and to obtain data on PAQ from the exposed women. Plume reconstruction was used to calculate the GIS dust exposure levels. There were no air monitoring data during the first 24 hr after the events of 11 September, and the plume dust level estimates for the GIS were evaluated for precision during that time using plume density derived from satellite photographs.

The highest levels of PAH-DNA adducts were found in women whose blood was collected closest to the date of 11 September, but no association was found with EEL PAH exposure around the WTC is known to have been significant (Landrigan et al. 2004). Extremely high levels of PAHs were found in settled dust (Lioy et al. 2002; Offenberg et al. 2003), and estimated air levels were > 10 ng/[m.sup.3] in the P[M.sub.2.5] fraction soon after the incident compared with < 1 in normal urban air and in the plume later on (Pleil et al. 2004).

Our data for each woman's EI and zone locations were available for the day of the event through 8 October 2001, the time when peak exposures occurred around the WTC. PM and PAH levels were highest during the first 36 hr after 11 September (Offenberg et al. 2003). However, airborne PM and PAH levels were elevated for some time after 11 September (Pleil et al. 2004; Swartz et al. 2003). Therefore, PM and PAH exposures were greater in weeks 3 and 4 than in week 2, because women spent more time in the affected area as time went on. This pattern may reflect seasonality of PAH emissions, as recent New York City personal air monitoring data suggest (Perera et al. 2004). However, other studies that have found higher PAH levels in winter observed marked differences only in highly polluted pol·lute  
tr.v. pol·lut·ed, pol·lut·ing, pol·lutes
1. To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter. See Synonyms at contaminate.

2.
 areas (Perera et al. 1992; Topinka et al. 2000). With urban or tobacco smoke exposures, the PAH-DNA adducts were only slightly higher in winter than in summer (Georgiadis et al. 2001).

Metals were reported to be elevated at the WTC site debris by some but not all investigators. Blood Pb and urine Sb were higher in exposed than in control firefighters, whereas urine Cd was higher in more heavily exposed than in less heavily exposed workers (Edelman et al. 2003). When adjusted for potential confounders, we found no significant associations between metal biomarkers and EI or timing of the blood draw closer to 11 September. Metal levels other than blood Hg in these women were not higher than among firefighters or among females in NHANES. Moreover, the adjusted geometric mean for blood Hg was identical to that in the NHANES females (0.9 [micro]g/L; Table 4) and in women of reproductive age in NHANES (1.0 [micro]g/L; Schober et al. 2003). Although these comparisons are helpful in understanding our exposure data, they should be interpreted with caution because the three groups are very different demographically and geographically.

Organochlorines were abundant at the WTC site and in runoff Runoff

The procedure of printing the end-of-day prices for every stock on an exchange onto ticker tape.

Notes:
If the "tape is late" then it can take a long time to print off all the closing prices.
 from the site (Lioy et al. 2002; Litten et al. 2003; Offenberg et al. 2003), and the compounds found at the highest levels in environmental samples were those consistent with combustion products. Similarly, elevated levels of heptachlorodibenzodioxin and heptachlorodibenzofuran were reported in the most highly exposed firefighters examined (Edelman et al. 2003). In our study group, there were no significant associations between OCs and EI. The PCB levels are quite similar to levels reported in several recent studies, especially considering the differences in the populations and the laboratories performing the analyses. For example, our median [summation]PCB4 level (83 ng/g lipid) is lower than that in a New York City cohort of pregnant women who were younger (median, 151 ng/g lipid; mean age, 25 years; Wolff et al. 2005). Another northern New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 cohort had similar levels [geometric mean, 1.2 [micro]g/L; estimated to be 150 ng/g lipid based on 8 g/L plasma lipids in pregnant women (Longnecker et al. 2003); mean age, 26 years; Fitzgerald et al. 2004]. Finally, levels are similar to those found in two breast milk pools from California and North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
, collected in 2002-2003 from mothers approximately 30 years of age (Wang and Needham 2003).

Levels of 2,3,4,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran were unusually high in the WTC outfall out·fall  
n.
The place where a sewer, drain, or stream discharges.


outfall
Noun

Brit, Austral & NZ the mouth of a river, drain, or pipe:
 (Litten et al. 2003); this compound was not detectable in 59% of our women, although it has usually been found in breast milk at levels equal or higher than those of 1,2,3,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzodioxin or 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachlorodibenzodioxin/furan (Focant et al. 2002; Glynn et al. 2001; Yang yang (yang) [Chinese] in Chinese philosophy, the active, positive, masculine principle that is complementary to yin; see yin, under principle.  et al. 2002). Other detected dioxins and dibenzofurans found by us (1,2,3,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzodioxin, 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachlorodibenzodioxin/furan, and OCDD) are also widely detected and are the highest detected congeners in breast milk (Focant et al. 2002; Glynn et al. 2001; Schaum et al. 2003; Schecter et al. 2002). Their relative proportions (i.e., OCDD > 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachlorodibenzodioxin > 1,2,3,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzodioxin) are similar to those among the WTC women in our cohort, even where levels were much higher (Yang et al. 2002). Furthermore, the proportions are similar to those reported from California and North Carolina 30-year-old mothers (Wang and Needham 2003), although median levels in our mothers were higher (e.g., OCDD from California, 42 pg/g lipid; from North Carolina, 84.6 pg/g lipid). This would not be attributable to age or other factors, given the effect sizes in our multivariate models (data not shown). PBDEs in our samples were somewhat lower than those reported in two milk pools (Wang and Needham 2004), but the proportions were very similar.

Our data show only a weak association of OCs with WTC-derived exposure in the month after 11 September. Levels are similar to those in firefighters with demonstrated elevations, and levels are higher than those reported in recent national data (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2003). Therefore, some of these compounds might have been absorbed by bystanders and firefighters in lower Manhattan after 11 September. However, the levels might not be high enough to show relationships with exposure because the WTC increment To add a number to another number. Incrementing a counter means adding 1 to its current value.  over existing body burden is not detectable. For example, if the native body burden is 20 pg/g lipid, a pregnant woman would have 600 ng total in 30 kg of adipose adipose /ad·i·pose/ (ad´i-pos)
1. fatty.

2. the fat present in the cells of adipose tissue.


ad·i·pose
adj.
Of, relating to, or composed of animal fat; fatty.
 and circulating cir·cu·late  
v. cir·cu·lat·ed, cir·cu·lat·ing, cir·cu·lates

v.intr.
1. To move in or flow through a circle or circuit: blood circulating through the body.

2.
 lipid. To see an increase in level, an absorption of 120 ng would be required, based on 20% precision in the measurements (laboratory and population variation). Our population was in varying stages of pregnancy and after delivery at time of blood collection, which greatly complicates interpretation of biomarker data, including metals and persistent organic compounds.

In summary, we were able to successfully incorporate results of a WTC plume reconstruction model into predicted exposures and doses of airborne emissions among these women who were near the WTC immediately after 11 September. The results provided daily estimates of exposure by using both geographic dust concentrations and individual activity patterns to predict individual EIs among 187 women for 28 days. Women experienced very high dust exposures; as a result of being dose to the WTC in September 2001, the PM exposures were likely > 100 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] for women exposed immediately after 11 September. Higher PAH-DNA adducts were found in blood samples collected closer to 11 September, and personal PAQ was associated with relative dust levels estimated from plume reconstruction (EI).

Correction

The values listed in "Materials and Methods" for the sample (165 women, 33 of whom were in the third trimester) were incorrect in the online version. Also, in Table 3, the values in the "Total" row appeared under the wrong columns. These have all been corrected here.
Table 1. Selected demographic factors and activity patterns among
187 participants in the Mount Sinai WTC pregnancy study by
[Sigma]EI derived from plume reconstruction data.

                                                          [SIGMA]EI
                                                        [greater than
                                           [SIGMA]EI    or equal to]
                                           median (n)     median (n)

Interview age (years)
  < 25                                         1              1
  25-29                                       19              8
  30-34                                       30             43
  35-39                                       34             28
  [greater than or equal to] 40                9             14
Race
  White                                       70             64
  Black or African American                    9             11
  Asian                                        2              6
  Hispanic                                     5              8
  Other(mixed)                                 7              5
Marital status
  Married                                     83             83
  Living with the baby's father                7              7
  Never married/separated/divorced             3              4
Education
  Some high school/high school                 4              5
  Some college                                12             12
  Bachelor's degree (grades 13-16)            31             27
  Some graduate school (grades                 4              5
    [greater than or equal to] 17)
  Master's degree                             25             23
  Doctoral degree (e.g., JD, MD, PhD)         17             22
Smoking at time of blood draw
  No                                          87             90
  Yes                                          6              4
Worked or lived in lower Manhattan
before 11 September
  Worked near WTC                             59             54
  Lived near WTC                              22             16
  Lived and worked near WTC                    9             24
  Neither worked nor lived near WTC            3              0
Evacuation through debris on 11
    September
  Did not evacuate through debris             66             36
  1-39 min                                    20             25
  [greater than or equal to] 40 min            7             33
Dust in home?
  Yes                                         25             28
  No                                           7             10
Dust removal method
  Wet cloth                                    4              4
  Both wet cloth and wet mop                  14             20
  Don't know                                   7              5
  None of the above                            2              3
Did you wear a dust mask while cleaning?
  Yes                                         10             24
  No                                          21             11

                                           Total (n)   p-value

Interview age (years)
  < 25                                         2
  25-29                                       27
  30-34                                       73
  35-39                                       62
  [greater than or equal to] 40               23         0.12 (a)
Race
  White                                      134
  Black or African American                   20
  Asian                                        8
  Hispanic                                    13
  Other(mixed)                                12         0.48
Marital status
  Married                                    166
  Living with the baby's father               14
  Never married/separated/divorced             7         0.93
Education
  Some high school/high school                 9
  Some college                                24
  Bachelor's degree (grades 13-16)            58
  Some graduate school (grades                 9
    [greater than or equal to] 17)
  Master's degree                             48
  Doctoral degree (e.g., JD, MD, PhD)         39         0.33 (a)
Smoking at time of blood draw
  No                                         177
  Yes                                         10         0.50
Worked or lived in lower Manhattan
before 11 September
  Worked near WTC                            113
  Lived near WTC                              38
  Lived and worked near WTC                   33         0.019 *
  Neither worked nor lived near WTC            3         0.009 **
Evacuation through debris on 11
    September
  Did not evacuate through debris            102
  1-39 min                                    45
  [greater than or equal to] 40 min           40       < 0.0001
Dust in home?
  Yes                                         53
  No                                          17         0.67
Dust removal method
  Wet cloth                                    8
  Both wet cloth and wet mop                  34
  Don't know                                  12
  None of the above                            5         0.76
Did you wear a dust mask while cleaning?
  Yes                                         34
  No                                          32         0.003

The median [Sigma]EI for 187 women was 2.66 (relative
dust exposure). p-Values are for chi-square.

(a) Test for trend. * p=0.019; chi-square test of the three
categories of women who worked or lived near the WTC.
**p= 0.009; all four categories, using Fisher's exact test.

Table 2. EI (dust intensity) in relation to PAQ score in lower
Manhattan, by week after 11 September.

                                        Week 1 (EI median = 2.45)

                                                   No. [greater
PAQ score in lower Manhattan            No. <    than or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)               median        median

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/               12            16
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or          3              8
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most            77            59
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                   0.19

                                        Week 1 (EI median = 2.45)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                              39
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's              3.3 [+ or -] 1.5
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                   3.92 [+ or -] 3.39
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI           0.074, p = 0.66
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                             185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                       2.87 [+ or -] 2.54
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                          2.45

                                        Week 1 (EI median = 2.45)

                                        % [greater than
PAQ score in lower Manhattan             or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)                   median        Total

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/                   57           28
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or              73           11
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most                47           146
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                      0.19

                                        Week 1 (EI median = 2.45)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                              39
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's              3.3 [+ or -] 1.5
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                   3.92 [+ or -] 3.39
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI          0.074, p = 0.66
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                              185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                        2.87 [+ or -] 2.54
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                          2.45

                                        Week 2 (EI median = 0.016)

                                                   No. [greater
PAQ score in lower Manhattan            No. <    than or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)               median        median

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/               10            62
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or          7             13
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most            75            18
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                  < 0.0001

                                        Week 2 (EI median = 0.016)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                             92
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's             3.4 [+ or -] 1.2
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                 0.086 [+ or -] 0.15
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI          0.288, p = 0.005
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                             185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                      0.051 [+ or -] 0.115
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                         0.016

                                        Week 2 (EI median = 0.016)

                                        % [greater than
PAQ score in lower Manhattan             or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)                   median        Total

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/                   86           72
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or              65           20
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most                19           93
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                     < 0.0001

                                        Week 2 (EI median = 0.016)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                               92
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's              3.4 [+ or -] 1.2
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                  0.086 [+ or -] 0.15
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI          0.288, p = 0.005
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                               185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                       0.051 [+ or -] 0.115
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                           0.016

                                        Week 3 (EI median = 0.13)

                                                   No. [greater
PAQ score in lower Manhattan            No. <    than or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)               median        median

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/               25            64
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or          15            23
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most            52             6
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                  < 0.0001

                                        Week 3 (EI median = 0.13)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                             127
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's              3.1 [+ or -] 1.1
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                   0.22 [+ or -] 0.20
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI           0.219, p = 0.013
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                              185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                        0.16 [+ or -] 0.19
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                          0.13

                                        Week 3 (EI median = 0.13)

                                        % [greater than
PAQ score in lower Manhattan             or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)                   median        Total

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/                   72           89
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or              61           38
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most                10           58
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                     < 0.0001

                                        Week 3 (EI median = 0.13)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                               127
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's              3.1 [+ or -] 1.1
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                   0.22 [+ or -] 0.20
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI           0.219, p = 0.013
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                               185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                        0.16 [+ or -] 0.19
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                           0.13

                                        Week 4 (EI median = 0.11)

                                                   No. [greater
PAQ score in lower Manhattan            No. <    than or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)               median        median

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/               28            56
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or          24            35
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most            40             2
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                   < 0.0001

                                        Week 4 (EI median = 0.11)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                               143
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's               2.9 [+ or -] 1.2
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                    0.22 [+ or -] 0.20
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI           0.308, p = 0.0002
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                                185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                          0.18 [+ or -] 0.20
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                             0.11

                                        Week 4 (EI median = 0.11)

                                        % [greater than
PAQ score in lower Manhattan             or equal to]
(PAQ range, 1-8; n = 185)                   median        Total

Women who spent most of
    their time in zones 1-5 (n = 185)
  Very hazy/smoky to dense/                   67           84
    visible haze/smoke with bad
    smell during some/most
    of the time (PAQ 3-4)
  None to rarely visibly hazy or              59           59
    smoky with none to occasional
    bad smell (PAQ 1-2)
  Those who did not spend most                 5           42
    of the week in zones 1-5
    (PAQ not applicable)
  p-Value (a)                                    < 0.0001

                                        Week 4 (EI median = 0.11)

Women who spent most of their
    time in zones 1-5 during the
    given week after 11 September
  No.                                              143
  Mean PAQ score [sum of week's             2.9 [+ or -] 1.2
    air (mean [+ or -] SD) quality at
    work and/or home]
  Mean [SIGMA]EI for week                  0.22 [+ or -] 0.20
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Spearman correlation of [SIGMA]EI         0.308, p = 0.0002
    with PAQ score ([r.sub.S])
Women who worked or lived in
    zones 1-5 on 11 September
    including those who did not spend
    much time therein the 4 weeks
    after 11 September (n)
  No.                                              185
  [SIGMA]EI for week                       0.18 [+ or -] 0.20
    (mean [+ or -] SD)
  Median                                          0.11

Two women who did not live or work were not present in zones 1-5
on 11 September were excluded from these analyses for this table.

(a) p-Values are for chi-square and were identical for the
Mantel-Haenszel (trend test). In the 4-week analyses for PAQ
versus weekly EI, the p-values for the two groups with PAQ
values 1-2 and 3-4 (2 x 2 tables) were 0.37 (n = 39), 0.031
(n = 92), 0.21 (n = 127), and 0.37 (n = 143).

Table 3. PAH-DNA adducts among 160 mothers in the Mount Sinai
WTC pregnancy study.

     All mothers              Biospecimen collection times

                           April-October 2002   Feb-March 2002
PAH-DNA (apmn)   No. (%)        No. (%)             No. (%)

ND               88 (55)        62 (70)             26 (36)
< 60             36 (22)        14 (16)             22 (31)
60-100           25 (16)        10 (11)             15 (22)
> 100            11 (7)          2 (2)               9 (11)
Total            160            88 *                72 *

All mothers            Specimens collected Feb-March (a)

                                      [greater than or equal to]
                 < Median [SIGMA]EI      Median EEI [SIGMA]EI
PAH-DNA (apmn)         No. (%)                 No. (%)

ND                     11 (15)                 15 (21)
< 60                   14 (20)                 80 (11)
60-100                  6 (8)                   9 (12)
> 100                   5 97)                   4 (6)
Total                  36                      36

ND, not detected.

(a) By IEI (median =3.30). * Distributions are significantly
different, chi-square p < 0.001.

Table 4. Blood and urinary biomarkers for metals among 100
mothers in the Mount Sinai WTC pregnancy study.

                       All mothers tested   February-March 2002
                           (n = 100)            biospecimens

                                                (n = 44)

                                    %                     %
                                [greater              [greater
                                 than or               than or
                                equal to]             equal to]
                       Median      LOD      Median       LOD

Urinary metals
    ([micro]g/L) (d)
  Pb                    0.83        94       0.78         98
  Co                    0.33        96       0.38        100
  Cd                    0.23        98       0.20         98
  Sb                   < LOD        27      < LOD         34
  U                    < LOD        53       0.0055       52

Blood metals
    ([micro]g/L) (g)
  Pb                     17        100      16           100
  Cd                    0.30        71       0.3          55
  Hg (total)            3.2        100       2.2         100

                          February-March 2002
                              biospecimens

                            (n = 44) (a)

                                   [greater than
                                   or equal to]
                       < Median      < Median
                       [SIGMA]EI     [SIGMA]EI

Urinary metals
    ([micro]g/L) (d)
  Pb                      0.75          0.89
  Co                      0.35          0.40
  Cd                      0.24          0.19
  Sb                     < LOD         < LOD
  U                       0.0055       < LOD

Blood metals
    ([micro]g/L) (g)
  Pb                     16            16
  Cd                      0.30          0.22
  Hg (total)              2.4           2.2

                            WTC exposed
                          firefighters (b)

                                                NHANES (c)
                                                  median
                       Control        Exposed   (females)

Urinary metals
    ([micro]g/L) (d)
  Pb                    1.0            1.2        0.6
  Co                    NS                        0.41
  Cd                    0.38 (e)       0.32       0.34
  Sb                    0.16 *         0.20 *     0.12
  U                     0.0075 (f)     0.0061     0.006

Blood metals
    ([micro]g/L) (g)
  Pb                   19 *           28 *       13
  Cd                                              0.3
  Hg (total)           "Not higher"               0.9

Abbreviations: GM, geometric mean; NS, not significant; U, uranium.
Metals were tested in a random subset of 100 women, of whom 44 gave
specimens from February through March 2002; the remainder were
sampled after this time.

(a) Median < or [greater than or equal to] median [SIGMA]EI 13.62);
metals were not significantly different in this analysis for values <
versus [greater than or equal to] EI with all or with 44 samples,
both median tests (Kruskal-Wallis) and trend (Mantel-Haenszel).
There were 22 samples each in the groups with values < versus
[greater than or equal to] median [SIGMA]EI. (b) Edelman et al.
2003; GM adjusted. (c) CDC 2003. (d) LODs for metals in urine were
as follows ([micro]g/L): Pb, 0.3; Co, 0.08; Sb, 0.07; Cd, 0.06; U,
0.005. (e) Urinary Cd was higher in more heavily exposed than in
less heavily exposed firefighters, although all-exposed firefighters
were not higher than control. (f) Urine uranium levels were higher
in more heavily exposed than in less heavily exposed firefighters,
although this difference was not statistically significant. (g) LODs
for metals in blood were as follows ([micro]g/L): Pb, 3; Cd 0.2;
total Hg, 0.2. Metals were not significantly different in this analysis
for values < versus [greater than or equal to] EI with all 100 or with
44 samples collected in February through March 2002, both median
tests (Kruskal-Wallis) and trend. * p-Value < 0.05.

Table 5. Plasma OC and PBDE levels among 100 mothers in the
Mount Sinai WTC pregnancy study.

                                           All mothers
                                             (n=100)

                                                 % [greater than
                                    Median       or equal to] LOD
Serum OCs (c)
  [SIGMA]PCB4 (ng/g lipid) (d)       84                 94
  2,3,4,7,8-PentaCDF             LOD (4.0) (f)          41
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,6,7,8-HexaCDD (g)            22                 80
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDD (h)         30                 97
    (pg/g lipid; n=99)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDF (i)          7.2               79
    (pg/g lipid)
  OCDD (k) (pg/g lipid)             224                 95
Serum PBDEs
  BDE-28 (f) (ng/g lipid)             0.65              59
  BDE-47 (m) (ng/g lipid)             9.7               96
  BDE-99 (n) (ng/g lipid)             1.5               70
  BDE-100 (o) (ng/g lipid)            1.8               96
  BDE-153 (p) (ng/g lipid)            1.8               98

                                   February-March 2002
                                   biospecimens (n=44)

                                          % [greater than
                                 Median   or equal to] LOD
Serum OCs (c)
  [SIGMA]PCB4 (ng/g lipid) (d)    82              93
  2,3,4,7,8-PentaCDF             < LOD            50
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,6,7,8-HexaCDD (g)         22              89
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDD (h)      24              95
    (pg/g lipid; n=99)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDF (i)       6.2            84
    (pg/g lipid)
  OCDD (k) (pg/g lipid)          214              98
Serum PBDEs
  BDE-28 (f) (ng/g lipid)          0.38           50
  BDE-47 (m) (ng/g lipid)          8.7            93
  BDE-99 (n) (ng/g lipid)          1.1            61
  BDE-100 (o) (ng/g lipid)         1.5            95
  BDE-153 (p) (ng/g lipid)         2.1           100

                                  By [SIGMA]EI < or [greater than
                                    or equal to] median (2.66)
                                            (n = 100)

                                 < Median    [greater than or equal
                                 [SIGMA]EI    to] Median [SIGMA]EI
Serum OCs (c)
  [SIGMA]PCB4 (ng/g lipid) (d)      81                92
  2,3,4,7,8-PentaCDF               < LOD             < LOD
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,6,7,8-HexaCDD (g)           21                22
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDD (h)        31                29
    (pg/g lipid; n=99)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDF (i)         7.6               6.7
    (pg/g lipid)
  OCDD (k) (pg/g lipid)            206               236
Serum PBDEs
  BDE-28 (f) (ng/g lipid)            0.72              0.55
  BDE-47 (m) (ng/g lipid)            9.1              10.2
  BDE-99 (n) (ng/g lipid)            1.5               1.5
  BDE-100 (o) (ng/g lipid)           1.5               1.9
  BDE-153 (p) (ng/g lipid)           1.7               2.2

                                     WTC exposed
                                  firefighters (a)

                                                       NHANES (b)
                                 Control    Exposed      median
                                                       (females)
Serum OCs (c)
  [SIGMA]PCB4 (ng/g lipid) (d)   -- (e)               < LOD
  2,3,4,7,8-PentaCDF                                  < LOD (4.8)
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,6,7,8-HexaCDD (g)                             < LOD (7.5)
    (pg/g lipid)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDD (h)       19 *      28 *     < LOD (24.7)
    (pg/g lipid; n=99)
  1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDF (i)     -- * (j)             < LOD (5.2)
    (pg/g lipid)
  OCDD (k) (pg/g lipid)                               < LOD (145)
Serum PBDEs
  BDE-28 (f) (ng/g lipid)
  BDE-47 (m) (ng/g lipid)
  BDE-99 (n) (ng/g lipid)
  BDE-100 (o) (ng/g lipid)
  BDE-153 (p) (ng/g lipid)

Abbreviations: GM, geometric mean. Organochlorines were tested in
a random subset of 100 women, of whom 44 gave specimens in February
through March 2002; the remainder were sampled thereafter.

(a) Edelman et al. 2003; GM adjusted, (b) CDC 2003. (c) OC and PBDE
levels did not differ significantly by date of collection or by
[SIGMA]EI. p-Values (Kruskal-Wallis) were all > 0.2 by median
[SIGMA]EI; the Spearman correlation coefficients were not statistically
significant (p > 0.05). Multivariate analyses predicting the OC/PBDE
levels by the median [SIGMA]EI adjusting for covariates did not change
the significance of the associations. There were 50 samples each in
the groups with values < versus [greater than or equal to] median
[SIGMA]EI. (d) Median of [SIGMA]PCB4 without lipid-correction was
0.46 [micro]g/kg. LOD for [SIGMA]PCB4 was 29 ng/g lipid. (e) Not
different from controls; values not reported by Edelman et al. (2003).
(f) Median of all LOD values; range of LODs was 1.8-11 pg/g. (g) LOD,
6.2 pg/g lipid (median of LODs for all such individuals; range,
3.1-18 pg/g). (h) LOD, 7.2 pg/g; range, 3.9-20. (i) LOD, 4.9 pg/g;
range, 2.6-14. (j) 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HeptaCDF in the firefighter study
(Edelman et al. 2003) was more prevalent among all-exposed versus
controls (rates not given here); adjusted odds ratio, 3.5; 95%
confidence interval, 1.4-9.0 for exposed (Edelman et al. 2003).
(k) LOD, 78 pg/g; range, 36-240. (l) LOD, 0.4 ng/g lipid (median
of LODs and limits of quantitation for all such individuals;
range, 0.3-0.7 ng/g lipid). (m) LOD, 2.0 ng/g; range, 1-4.
(n) LOD, 1.0 ng/g; range, 0.4-3. (o) LOD, 0.5 ng/g; range,
0.5-6 (n = 3). (p) LOD, 0.4 ng/g; range, 0.3-5 (n = 2).
* p-Value < 0.05.


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Mary S. Wolff, (7) Susan L. Teitelbaum, (1) Paul J. Lioy, (2) Regina M. Santella, (3) Richard Y. Wang, (4) Robert L. Jones, (4) Kathleen L. Caldwell, (4) Andreas Sjodin, (4) Wayman E. Turner, (4) Wet Li, (2) Panos Georgopoulos, (2) and Gertrud S. Berkowitz (1)

(1) Mount Sinai School of Medicine
This page is about a medical school in New York. For other uses, please see: Mount Sinai (disambiguation)


Mount Sinai School of Medicine is a medical school found in the borough of Manhattan in New York City.
, New York, New York, USA; (2) Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Robert Wood Johnson Robert Wood Johnson was the name shared by members of the family that descended from the President of Johnson & Johnson:
  • Robert Wood Johnson I (1845-1910)
  • Robert Wood Johnson II (1893-1968)
  • Robert Wood Johnson III (1920-1970)
 Medical School-University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA; (3) Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA; (4) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Address correspondence to M.S. Wolff, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Box 1057, 1 Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029 USA. Telephone: (212) 241-6173. Fax: (212) 996-0407. E-mail: mary.wolff@ mssm.edu.

We thank L.L. Needham, R. Callan, Z. Liu, J. Golub, K. Nichols, K. Yamada, L. Spellman, R. Osborne, C. Dodson, and P.B. Olive for their generous and valuable contributions to this study.

This research was supported by National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is one of 27 Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),which is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Director of the NIEHS is Dr. David A. Schwartz.  (NIEHS NIEHS National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH, DHHS) ) grants P42ES07384 and P30ES09089 and by the September 11th Fund The September 11th Fund was created by the New York Community Trust [1] and the United Way of New York City[2] in response to the destruction of the World Trade Center on 9/11/2001.  created by the New York Community Trust New York Community Trust was founded in 1924 by a group of New York bankers. It is one of the oldest and largest community foundations in the United States with 2006 assets of over $1.9 billion.  and United Way of New York City. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided support for laboratory measurements of metals, organochlorines, and polybrominated diphenylethers. Support from the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute for the exposure characterization was derived from a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency University Partnership (CR827033) and an NIEHS Center Grant supplement (ES05022-1551).

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.

Received 25 October 2004; accepted 27 January 2005.
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