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Health and environmental consequences of the World Trade Center disaster.


The attack on the World Trade Center (WTC WTC World Trade Center, see there ) created an acute environmental disaster of enormous magnitude. This study characterizes the environmental exposures resulting from destruction of the WTC and assesses their effects on health. Methods include ambient air sampling; analyses of outdoor and indoor settled dust; high-altitude imaging and modeling of the atmospheric plume; inhalation studies of WTC dust in mice; and clinical examinations, community surveys, and prospective epidemiologic studies of exposed populations. WTC dust was found to consist predominantly (95%) of coarse particles and contained pulverized pul·ver·ize  
v. pul·ver·ized, pul·ver·iz·ing, pul·ver·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To pound, crush, or grind to a powder or dust.

2. To demolish.

v.intr.
 cement, glass fibers, asbestos, lead, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  (PCBs), and polychlorinated furans and dioxins. Airborne particulate levels were highest immediately after the attack and declined thereafter. Particulate levels decreased sharply with distance from the WTC. Dust pH was highly alkaline (pH 9.0-11.0). Mice exposed to WTC dust showed only moderate pulmonary inflammation but marked bronchial bronchial /bron·chi·al/ (brong´ke-al) pertaining to or affecting one or more bronchi.

bron·chi·al
adj.
Relating to the bronchi, the bronchial tubes, or the bronchioles.
 hyperreactivity. Evaluation of 10,116 firefighters showed exposure-related increases in cough and bronchial hyperreactivity. Evaluation of 183 cleanup workers showed new-onset cough (33%), wheeze wheeze (hwez) a whistling type of continuous sound.

wheeze
v.
To breathe with difficulty, producing a hoarse whistling sound.

n.
A wheezing sound.
 (18%), and phlegm phlegm

humor effecting temperament of sluggishness. [Medieval Physiology: Hall, 130]

See : Laziness
 production (24%). Increased frequency of new-onset cough, wheeze, and shortness of breath Shortness of Breath Definition

Shortness of breath, or dyspnea, is a feeling of difficult or labored breathing that is out of proportion to the patient's level of physical activity.
 were also observed in community residents. Follow-up of 182 pregnant women who were either inside or near the WTC on 11 September showed a 2-fold increase in small-for-gestational-age (SGA SGA
abbr.
small for gestational age


Small-for-gestational-age (SGA)
A term used to describe newborns who are below the 10th percentile in height or weight for their estimated gestational age.
) infants. In summary, environmental exposures after the WTC disaster were associated with significant adverse effects on health. The high alkalinity al·ka·lin·i·ty
n.
The alkali concentration or alkaline quality of a substance that contains alkali.



alkalinity

1. the quality of being alkaline.

2.
 of WTC dust produced bronchial hyperreactivity, persistent cough, and increased risk of asthma. Plausible causes of the observed increase in SGA infants include maternal exposures to PAH PAH, PAHA aminohippuric acid.

PAH
abbr.
para-aminohippuric acid


PAH 1 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, see there 2. Pulmonary artery HTN
 and particulates. Future risk of mesothelioma Mesothelioma Definition

Mesothelioma is an uncommon disease that causes malignant cancer cells to form within the lining of the chest, abdomen, or around the heart. Its primary cause is believed to be exposure to asbestos.
 may be increased, particularly among workers and volunteers exposed occupationally to asbestos. Continuing follow-up of all exposed populations is required to document the long-term consequences of the disaster. Key words: air pollution, airway hyperresponsiveness, asbestos, occupational lung disease Main Article COPD

Occupational lung diseases are a specific branch of occupational diseases concerned primarily with work related exposures to harmful substances, be they dusts or gases, and the subsequent pulmonary disorders that may occur as a result.
, P[M.sub.2.5], P[M.sub.10], small for gestational age small for gestational age Intrauterine growth retardation Neonatology adjective Referring to an infant whose gestational age and weight gain are < expected for age. See Low birthweight.  (SGA). Environ Health Perspect 112:731-739 (2004). doi:10.1289/ehp.6702 available via http://dx.doi.org/[Online 18 February 2004]

**********

The destruction of the World Trade Center (WTC) on 11 September 2001 caused the largest acute environmental disaster that ever has befallen 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.
 (Claudio 2001; Landrigan 2001). The combustion of more than 90,000 L of jet fuel at temperatures above 1,000[degrees]C released a dense and intensely toxic atmospheric plume containing soot, metals, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and hydrochloric acid hydrochloric acid: see hydrogen chloride.
hydrochloric acid
 or muriatic acid

Solution in water of hydrogen chloride (HCl), a gaseous inorganic compound.
. The collapse of the towers pulverized cement, glass, and building contents and generated thousands of tons of particulate matter (PM) composed of cement dust, glass fibers, asbestos, lead, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), organochlorine or·gan·o·chlo·rine
n.
Any of various hydrocarbon pesticides, such as DDT, that contain chlorine.
 pesticides, and polychlorinated furans and dioxins (Clark et al. 2003; Lioy et al. 2002; McGee et al. 2003). These materials dispersed over lower Manhattan, Brooklyn, and for miles beyond. They entered nearby office, school, and residential buildings. Much remained at the site to form Ground Zero, a six-story pile of smoking rubble that burned intermittently for more than 3 months.

Populations at greatest risk of exposure included firefighters, police, paramedics, other first responders [Prezant et al. 2002; 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
) 2002], and construction workers and volunteers who worked initially in rescue and recovery and then for many months cleared rubble at Ground Zero. Others at potentially elevated risk included workers who cleaned WTC dust from nearby buildings, women who were pregnant on 11 September and succeeding weeks in lower Manhattan and adjacent areas of Brooklyn, and community residents, especially the 3,000 children who resided within 1 km of the towers and the 5,500 who attended school there.

Previous studies have documented the acute traumatic consequences of the attacks on the WTC, most notably the occurrence of 2,726 deaths, including 343 deaths among firefighters and 60 among police officers (CDC 2002). Early clinical and epidemiologic assessments documented a high prevalence of respiratory symptoms, particularly, persistent cough in firefighters and rescue workers exposed to WTC dust (CDC 2002; Prezant et al. 2002). The prevalence of those symptoms was related to intensity and duration of smoke and dust exposure. Studies of the mental health consequences of the disaster have documented a high prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder Posttraumatic stress disorder

An anxiety disorder in some individuals who have experienced an event that poses a direct threat to the individual's or another person's life.
 (PTSD PTSD posttraumatic stress disorder.

PTSD
abbr.
posttraumatic stress disorder


Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) 
) (Galea galea /ga·lea/ (ga´le-ah) [L.] a helmet-shaped structure.

galea aponeuro´tica  the aponeurosis connecting the two bellies of the occipitofrontalis muscle.
 et al. 2002b; Fairbrother et al. 2003) and other psychological sequelae sequelae Clinical medicine The consequences of a particular condition or therapeutic intervention , including increased rates of drug and alcohol abuse (Boscarino et al. 2002; Galea et al. 2002a; Stuber et al. 2002; Vlahov et al. 2002a, 2002b).

In this report we summarize a comprehensive assessment of the impacts on human health and the environment of the chemical contaminants generated by destruction of the WTC. The work was undertaken by a consortium of six research centers supported by the 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) ) in collaboration with the New York City Department of Health, 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.
), and the CDC.

Environmental Exposure Assessment

Four distinct phases can be distinguished in the sources and patterns of environmental contamination that followed the attack on the WTC. We have been able to construct a chronology of this contamination from the environmental sampling data (Table 1).

Settled dust. To evaluate the composition of material deposited in lower Manhattan immediately after destruction of the WTC, samples of settled dust were collected at sites in lower Manhattan (Lioy et al. 2002; McGee et al. 2003). In the inorganic fraction of these samples, metals, radionuclides, ionic species, and asbestos were identified. In the organic fraction, PAHs, PCBs, polychlorinated dibenzodioxins and dibenzofurans, pesticides, phthalate Phthal´ate

n. 1. (Chem.) A salt of phthalic acid.
 esters, brominated diphenyl diphenyl /di·phen·yl/ (di-fen´il) a toxic compound comprising two linked benzene rings, used as a fungistat in containers for shipping citrus fruits.

di·phen·yl
n.
See biphenyl.
 ethers, and other hydrocarbons were found (Lioy et al. 2002; Offenberg et al. 2003).

Each sample of settled dust had a highly alkaline pH (9.0-11.0). Asbestos levels ranged from 0.8% to 3.0% of mass; PAHs comprised > 0.1% of total mass; and lead content ranged from 101 to 625 ppm. Morphologically, most of the dust was fibrous and contained mineral wool, glass fibers, asbestos, wood, paper, and cotton fibers (Figure 1). Coarse cement particles were also a major component (Figure 2).

[FIGURES 1-2 OMITTED]

To assess the composition of settled dust by size, samples were mechanically sieved and then separated aerodynamically into three fractions (Lioy et al. 2002; McGee et al. 2003). More than 95% of the mass consisted of PM > 10 gm in diameter. The largest mass concentration consisted of PM > 53 [micro]m in diameter, and there were proportionately more particles in this large size range in outdoor than in indoor samples. PM [less than or equal to] 2.5 [micro]m in aerodynamic diameter (P[M.sub.2.5]) comprised 0.88-1.98% of total mass. Alkalinity decreased with decreasing particle size, and P[M.sub.2.5] had a more nearly neutral pH (Lioy et al. 2002; McGee et al. 2003). This finding is consistent with the dominant presence of highly alkaline, coarse cement particles in the large size fraction. There was no geographical variation in particle size distribution The particle size distribution[1] ("PSD") of a powder, or granular material, or particles dispersed in fluid, is a list of values or a mathematical function that defines the relative amounts of particles present, sorted according to size.  in the settled dust samples, nor was a relationship found in indoor samples between particle size distribution and height above the ground.

To measure the elemental concentration of dust particles, X-ray fluorescence and inductively coupled plasma--mass spectrometry (ICP-MS ICP-MS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy ) analyses were employed. Additionally, selected samples of PM > 2.5 [micro]m were sent to the National Institute of Standards and Technology National Institute of Standards and Technology, governmental agency within the U.S. Dept. of Commerce with the mission of "working with industry to develop and apply technology, measurements, and standards" in the national interest.  (NIST (National Institute of Standards & Technology, Washington, DC, www.nist.gov) The standards-defining agency of the U.S. government, formerly the National Bureau of Standards. It is one of three agencies that fall under the Technology Administration (www.technology. ; Gaithersburg, MD) for neutron activation analysis Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA) is a nuclear process used for determining certain concentrations of elements in a vast amount of materials. NAA allows discrete sampling of elements as it disregards the chemical form of a sample, and focuses solely on its nucleus. . Results showed that chlorine was detectable only in the P[M.sub.2.5] fraction, whereas 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. , aluminum, titanium, and magnesium were present principally in the P[M.sub.10-53] fraction, and iron, zinc, and calcium were most highly abundant in the P[M.sub.2.5-10] and P[M.sub.10-5.3] fractions. A possible explanation for this distribution is that Cl in particulates was generated by high-temperature combustion of plastics and thus was concentrated in the smaller size fractions, whereas elements associated with the larger particles generated by collapse of the buildings, such as Fe, Zn, and Ca, predominated in the larger fractions.

Organic pollutants were analyzed in 14 samples of settled dust separated according to particle size, including one indoor sample (Lioy et al. 2002; Offenberg et al. 2003). PCBs comprised less than 0.001% of total mass. Organochlorine pesticides, including chlordanes, hexachlorobenzene, heptachlor heptachlor: see insecticides. , 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE (Dynamic Data Exchange) A message protocol in Windows that allows application programs to request and exchange data between them automatically.

DDE - Dynamic Data Exchange
), 2,4'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. ), and mirex mirex

an effective organic pesticide used in ant control and as a fire retardant; it is, however, very persistent in tissue and now banned because of residue problems.
, were found at low concentrations. PAHs were found in greatest concentrations in the relatively larger particles (P[M.sub.10-53]), although concentrations greater than those typically found in urban air were found also in P[M.sub.2.5]. An estimated 100-1,000 tons of PAHs were spread over a localized area of lower Manhattan within 0.5 km of Ground Zero (Lioy et al. 2002; Offenberg et al. 2003).

Airborne PM. Collection of airborne P[M.sub.2.5] samples was initiated at a site in lower Manhattan on 14 September 2001. Levels of daily P[M.sub.2.5] and of hourly airborne carbon soot levels were measured at the New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the  (NYU NYU New York University
NYU New York Undercover (TV show) 
) Downtown Hospital (located 0.3 km east of Ground Zero) and at a site adjacent to the NYU Medical Center at First Avenue and 26th Street (0.7 km from Ground Zero). Collection of air samples at these locations continued until the last fire was extinguished on 20 December (Thurston and Chen 2002; Thurston et al. 2003; U.S. EPA 2004).

Levels of P[M.sub.2.5] very highly elevated above normal urban background were detected in the first days after 11 September (Figure 3). The sampling sites were not located directly in the path of the WTC plume, and thus actual levels may have been still higher.

[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]

P[M.sub.2.5] levels peaked in the night hours when winds were calm and thermal inversions allowed pollution to accumulate to higher levels than during the day (Figure 4). Levels decreased on rainy days when fires and wind-blown dust were diminished. Levels declined as the fires were extinguished, and they came to approach background ambient levels by mid-October.

[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]

Demolition and removal of debris began at Ground Zero in mid-October after the fires had decreased in intensity. Coarse dust generated by demolition was detectable in ambient air until December, when pollution from the site diminished greatly.

Trace elements Trace elements
A group of elements that are present in the human body in very small amounts but are nonetheless important to good health. They include chromium, copper, cobalt, iodine, iron, selenium, and zinc. Trace elements are also called micronutrients.
. Concentrations of lead and Cl in P[M.sub.2.5] were intermittently elevated above background at sites near the WTC until mid-October, with occasional small peaks through October and into November. Ca levels, by contrast, were highest in October and November, possibly reflecting release of Ca-containing dust during demolition work at the site.

Dioxin and other chlorinated chlorinated /chlo·ri·nat·ed/ (klor´i-nat?ed) treated or charged with chlorine.

chlorinated

charged with chlorine.


chlorinated acids
some, e.g.
 compounds. The extensive use of polyvinyl chloride polyvinyl chloride (PVC), thermoplastic that is a polymer of vinyl chloride. Resins of polyvinyl chloride are hard, but with the addition of plasticizers a flexible, elastic plastic can be made.  (PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride.
PVC
 in full polyvinyl chloride

Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide.
) plastics within the WTC made possible the generation of dioxins during the fires. U.S. EPA monitoring data indicate that dioxin toxic equivalent (TEQ TEQ Toxicity Equivalent
TEQ Time Domain Equalizer
TEQ Teacher Education Quarterly
TEQ Terra Est Quaestuosa (web-based game, Spanish: Lland is Profitable)
TEQ The Evil Quakkers (gaming clan) 
) levels in air samples near Ground Zero were several orders of magnitude above those typical of urban areas in the United States (U.S. EPA 2002). From 23 September through late November, dioxin levels in lower Manhattan ranged from 10 to > 150 pg TEQ/[m.sup.3]. Dioxin concentrations several blocks from Ground Zero ranged from 1 to 10 pg, levels above typical urban background but considerably lower than those measured closer to Ground Zero. Dioxin levels declined rapidly during the autumn, and the U.S. EPA data suggest that by December 2001 they had decreased to typical urban background.

Asbestos. Asbestos, primarily chrysotile chrysotile: see serpentine.
chrysotile

Fibrous variety of the magnesium silicate mineral serpentine; it is the most important asbestos mineral. Individual fibres are white and silky, but the aggregate in veins is usually green or yellowish.
, was used for fire insulation in the construction of the North Tower of WTC up to the 40th floor (Nicholson et al. 1971; Reitze et al. 1972). Because of its known carcinogenic carcinogenic

having a capacity for carcinogenesis.
 potential (Nicholson and Landrigan 1996), asbestos became a major health concern after 11 September. More than 10,000 ambient air samples from lower Manhattan were tested for asbestos by the U.S. EPA using phase-contrast light microscopy (PCM (1) See phase change memory.

(2) (Plug Compatible Manufacturer) An organization that makes a computer or electronic device that is compatible with an existing machine.
) to identify fibers > 5 [micro]m in length; more than 8,000 of these samples were also examined by transmission electronic microscopy (TEM TEM

1. transmission electron microscope.

2. triethylenemelamine.

3. transmissible encephalopathy of mink.
) to identify fibers of [greater than or equal to] 0.5 pm in length (Columbia University 2003; U.S. EPA 2004).

Twenty-two of the air samples analyzed by the U.S. EPA were found to contain asbestos at levels above the clearance standard of 70 fibers/[mm.sup.2] established under the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act (U.S. EPA 1986). This standard uses the TEM measurement technique. Most of the elevated asbestos levels in air were observed in the earliest days after 11 September.

There were no 8-hr time-weighted average asbestos exposures to workers above the Occupational Safety and Health Administration Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), U.S. agency established (1970) in the Dept. of Labor (see Labor, United States Department of) to develop and enforce regulations for the safety and health of workers in businesses that are engaged in interstate  standard (U.S. Department of Labor 2003), which uses the PCM measurement technique of 0.1 fiber/[cm.sup.3], although workers undoubtedly had short-term peak exposures when they disturbed asbestos-containing rubble at Ground Zero.

Asbestos was detected in settled dust samples within apartments and other buildings (Lioy et al. 2002). Because some residents had prolonged exposures to uncleaned apartments, these indoor exposures may have added significantly to ambient exposures.

Airborne PAHs. To characterize PAHs in P[M.sub.2.5] from the WTC, the National Exposure Research Laboratory (NERL NERL National Exposure Research Laboratory ) of the U.S. EPA collected air samples with 47-mm Teflon filters at and near Ground Zero from late September 2001 through May 2002. Samples were collected from three Ground Zero fence-line locations and at 290 E. Broadway (about 0.7 km from Ground Zero). Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public, coeducational, research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States. Also known as The University of North Carolina, Carolina, North Carolina, or simply UNC  and the NERL used an assay developed to measure the larger (five- and six-ring) PAH molecules to determine the content of PAHs in these samples.

The PAHs in those samples consisted of a complex mixture including benzo(b)fluoranthene, benzo(k)fluoranthene, benzo(a)pyrene, benzo(e)pyrene, ideno(1,2,3-c,d)pyrene, dibenzo(a,h)anthracene anthracene (ăn`thrəsēn), C14H10, solid organic compound derived from coal tar. It melts at 218°C; and boils at 354°C;. , and benzo(g,h,i)perylene. All except benzo(e)pyrene are known or suspected carcinogens Carcinogens
Substances in the environment that cause cancer, presumably by inducing mutations, with prolonged exposure.

Mentioned in: Colon Cancer, Rectal Cancer
 and typically are produced by incomplete combustion of organic material. Levels at Ground Zero were highest immediately after the attack and declined over subsequent weeks (Figure 4). The consistently greater abundance of PAHs at Ground Zero than farther away indicates that burning debris at the site was a major source of airborne PAH pollution in lower Manhattan (Lioy et al. 2002; Offenberg et al. 2003). The unique pattern of PAHs found in these samples further confirmed that the WTC was the source.

Source identification. Multi-element analyses by ICP-MS of airborne samples collected at Ground Zero were used to generate chemical profiles that could identify specific sources of emission (Chillrud et al., unpublished data; McGee et al. 2003). These studies relied on factor analyses.

The principal emission sources identified included a) torch-cutting and heating of steel products (e.g., structural beams); b) combustion of building materials and contents; c) resuspension Noun 1. resuspension - a renewed suspension of insoluble particles after they have been precipitated
suspension - a mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy
 of earth crustal crust·al  
adj.
Of or relating to a crust, especially that of the earth or the moon.

Adj. 1. crustal - of or relating to or characteristic of the crust of the earth or moon
 materials; and d) combustion of fossil fuels in engines with catalytic converters, a quantitative source apportionment The process by which legislative seats are distributed among units entitled to representation; determination of the number of representatives that a state, county, or other subdivision may send to a legislative body. The U.S.  analysis of ambient P[M.sub.2.5] samples collected in lower Manhattan five blocks from Ground Zero indicated that airborne emissions from several of these same sources had spread to the surrounding community. Levels of WTC pollutants in the nearby community declined rapidly after September, and emissions from other conventional sources (e.g., oil heating combustion) came to predominate as the fires subsided.

Mapping the WTC plume. To better characterize the spatial distribution of the material released to the atmosphere by the destruction of the WTC, researchers at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) is a world-class research institution specializing in the Earth sciences and is part of Columbia University. The current director of Lamont is G. Michael Purdy. , the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS USGS United States Geological Survey (US Department of the Interior) ), NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 (National Aeronautics and Space Administration National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), civilian agency of the U.S. federal government with the mission of conducting research and developing operational programs in the areas of space exploration, artificial satellites (see satellite, artificial), ), the U.S. EPA, and Analytical Imaging and Geophysics, LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
 (Boulder, CO, USA) used images of lower Manhattan acquired on 16, 18, and 23 September 2001 by NASA's Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS AVIRIS Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer ). The resulting data had sufficiently clear resolution (1.7 m) to quantify the structure of the plume within street canyons in lower Manhattan (Chillrud et al., unpublished data; Clark et al. 2003).

The AVIRIS images indicate that the plume moved southeast from Ground Zero on the afternoon of 11 September across lower Manhattan and over areas of Brooklyn. The optical opacity of the plume appeared to diminish significantly from the fifth to the seventh days and to the twelfth day post-collapse, probably reflecting overall weakening of the fires during that time. On 16 and 18 September, the plume moved southward. By 23 September the plume had become significantly weaker (McCurdy et al. 2000).

Pollution modeling and individualized exposure assessment. Preliminary estimates of the plume location and relative dilution models have been used to develop 8-hr average characterizations of plume spread over Manhattan and Brooklyn for the first 2 weeks after 11 September. For the days immediately after 11 September, this information includes SPOT (Satellite Pour l'Observation de la Terre) and LANDSAT satellite images, NASA space station photographs, and MODIS MODIS Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (NASA/EOS instrument)
MODIS Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer
MODIS Model Oriented Distributed Systems
 (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) images (Figure 5).

[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]

To go beyond the AVIRIS data and comprehensively model individual exposures from the WTC plume, the high-altitude imagery is being integrated with information on the geographic location of individuals within the epidemiologic study populations and with health outcomes data. A nested/multiscale WTC plume location and relative dilution model being developed by the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI EOHSI Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute ) will be used in this program to reconstruct individual exposure profiles for incorporation in the epidemiologic studies within the NIEHS program.

Health Risk Assessment

Overview. Health risk assessments by the NIEHS Centers began by identifying populations at high risk of exposure to WTC contaminants and then undertaking clinical and epidemiologic studies within these groups (Landrigan 2001). Future analyses will seek to relate health outcomes data to geocoded information on contaminant contaminant /con·tam·i·nant/ (kon-tam´in-int) something that causes contamination.

contaminant

something that causes contamination.
 levels (McCurdy et al. 2000).

Firefighters. Firefighters were among the most heavily exposed populations. They also suffered the greatest loss of life of all occupational groups. In the first 24 hr after the attack on the WTC, 240 New York City firefighters sought emergency medical treatment; of these, 50 (20.8%) received treatment of acute respiratory symptoms caused by inhalation of airborne smoke and dust (Prezant et al. 2002; Spadafora 2002). Firefighters described walking through dense clouds of dust and smoke in the hours immediately after the attack, in which "the air was thick as soup" (CDC 2002).

Follow-up medical evaluation of 10,116 firefighters was conducted over the 6 months after the attack (Prezant et al. 2002). Persistent cough accompanied by other respiratory symptoms so severe as to require at least 4 weeks' leave of absence, termed "World Trade Center cough," was diagnosed in 332 firefighters (then and Thurston 2002; Scanlon 2002). Prevalence of WTC cough was related to intensity of smoke exposure, and occurred in 128 (8%) of 1,636 firefighters with a high level of exposure, in 187 (3%) of 6,958 with moderate exposure, and in 17 (1%) of 1,320 with low-level exposure (Figure 6). Among firefighters without WTC cough, bronchial hyperreactiviry was present in 77 (23%) of those with a high level of exposure, and in 26 (8%) of those with moderate exposure (Prezant et al. 2002). One case of eosinophilic pneumonia Eosinophilic Pneumonia Definition

Eosinophilic pneumonia is a group of diseases in which there is an above normal number of eosinophils in the lungs and blood.
Description

Eosinophilia is an increase in the number of eosinophils.
 was diagnosed in a firefighter (Beckett 2002; Rom et al. 2002). Induced sputum induced sputum Infectious disease Sputum obtained by having the Pt inhale a saline–salt water mist, causing the Pt to cough deeply  analysis of New York City firefighters showed increases in sputum sputum /spu·tum/ (spu´tum) [L.] expectoration; matter ejected from the trachea, bronchi, and lungs through the mouth.

sputum cruen´tum  bloody sputum.
 PM levels as well as in neutrophil neutrophil /neu·tro·phil/ (noo´tro-fil)
1. a granular leukocyte having a nucleus with three to five lobes connected by threads of chromatin, and cytoplasm containing very fine granules; cf. heterophil.

2.
 and eosinophil eosinophil /eo·sin·o·phil/ (e?o-sin´o-fil) a granular leukocyte having a nucleus with two lobes connected by a thread of chromatin, and cytoplasm containing coarse, round granules of uniform size.  counts. Those abnormalities were positively correlated with levels of exposure to WTC dust and combustion products, as well as with levels of PAHs in the bodies of firefighters (Edelman et al. 2003).

[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]

Cleanup and recovery workers. Many hundreds of workers were involved in clearing rubble and transporting it off-site. To assess the occupational exposures and health status of these workers, many of whom were truck drivers, a team from the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C.  and the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University undertook area air monitoring, personal exposure assessment, and health studies.

Air monitoring was conducted in October 2001 and April 2002. It focused on PM, asbestos, and VOCs. Monitoring was conducted across both day and night shifts, 7 days/week. Personal monitoring was conducted for 69 truck drivers. A total of 458 personal and area air samples were collected.

In October 2001, the highest concentrations of total dust were found at the debris pile (median, 1,603 [micro]g/[m.sup.3]). Total dust levels on the pile in October were approximately five times higher than at the perimeter. By April 2002, total dust concentrations of the site had become significantly lower and were more uniformly distributed. In October 2001, median personal particulate exposure was 323.7 [micro]g/[m.sup.3]. By April 2002, median exposure had fallen to 137.7 [micro]g/[m.sup.3]. Airborne asbestos concentrations were found to be generally low. The fibers detected were mostly very short. Concentrations of VOCs were generally low.

To assess prevalence of respiratory symptoms and lung dysfunction, a cross-sectional clinical and epidemiologic study was initiated in December 2001. A convenience sampling strategy was used to recruit workers on-site. Inclusion criteria required that participants be at least 18 years of age, employed at the site, and willing to answer a respiratory health questionnaire. Informed consent was obtained from all participants. Chronic respiratory symptoms were assessed using an interviewer-administered questionnaire adapted from the American Thoracic Society American Thoracic Society (ATS ), established in 1905, is an independently incorporated, international, educational and scientific society, serving its 18,000 members world-wide who are dedicated in respiratory and critical care medicine.  questionnaire. Spirometric measurements were performed using American Thoracic Society guidelines (American Thoracic Society 1994) to characterize lung function and to identify individuals with lung function below the normal range. Two trained pulmonary function technicians certified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health,
n.pr an institute of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that is responsible for assuring safe and healthful working conditions and for developing standards of safety and health.
 (NIOSH NIOSH National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, see there

NIOSH Recommendations for Safety & Health Standards

Agent  NIOSH REL*/OSHA PEL  Health effects
) conducted all spirometric assessments. Questionnaires and spirometry Spirometry

The measurement, by a form of gas meter, of volumes of gas that can be moved in or out of the lungs. The classical spirometer is a hollow cylinder (bell) closed at its top.
 were administered to 183 rubble removal workers.

Among the 183 workers surveyed, a high proportion (32.8%) reported experiencing cough that began after the start of employment at the WTC site; 24.0% reported new onset of phlegm production; and 17.5% reported new onset of wheeze. Approximately half of all workers reported that they had experienced at least one new symptom since they had begun working at the WTC site. The average percentage of predicted values for forced expiratory volume forced expiratory volume
n. Abbr. FEV
The maximum volume of air that can be expired from the lungs in a specific time interval when starting from maximum inspiration.
 in 1 sec (FE[V.sub.1]) and forced vital capacity forced vital capacity
n. Abbr. FVC
Vital capacity measured with subject exhaling as rapidly as possible.


forced vital capacity,
n a measure of the maximum rate of exhalation.
 (FVC FVC forced vital capacity.

FVC
abbr.
forced vital capacity


FVC,
n See forced vital capacity.


FVC

forced vital capacity.
) were 96.3% and 98.8%, respectively, and the mean FE[V.sub.1]:FVC ratio was 80.5%.

Community residents. To assess prevalence of new-onset respiratory symptoms after 11 September 2001 among previously healthy persons in lower Manhattan as well as in residents with preexisting pre·ex·ist or pre-ex·ist  
v. pre·ex·ist·ed, pre·ex·ist·ing, pre·ex·ists

v.tr.
To exist before (something); precede: Dinosaurs preexisted humans.

v.intr.
 asthma, a team from NYU Medical Center in collaboration with the 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
 State Department of Health and the New York Academy of Medicine The New York Academy of Medicine was founded in 1847 by a group of leading New York City metropolitan area physicians as a voice for the medical profession in medical practice and public health reform.  conducted a clinical and epidemiologic survey epidemiologic survey,
n See research, epidemiologic survey.
 (Reibman et al. 2003). Symptoms were assessed by questionnaire, and pulmonary function was evaluated in a subset of the study population by standard screening spirometry.

A total of 2,166 residents of lower Manhattan living within a 1.6-km radius of the WTC were enrolled in this survey and compared with 200 persons living 1.6-8.0 km distant. Spirometry was performed in 52 residents. Preliminary data indicate that previously healthy persons living near Ground Zero had a greater increase in prevalence of respiratory symptoms after 11 September than did more distant residents. These symptoms were predominantly cough, wheeze, and shortness of breath. Symptoms were not associated with abnormal screening spirometry.

Preexisting asthmatic residents in the exposed area also reported a higher prevalence of respiratory symptoms after 11 September. They also reported an increased use of asthma medication relative to controls.

Toxicologic studies. To complement the clinical and epidemiologic studies of workers, toxicologic examinations of WTC dust were performed (Gavett et al. 2003).

Methodology. Samples of P[M.sub.2.5] were obtained by size fractionation fractionation /frac·tion·a·tion/ (frak?shun-a´shun)
1. in radiology, division of the total dose of radiation into small doses administered at intervals.

2.
 of bulk settled WTC dust. These samples were chemically characterized (McGee et al. 2003). Consistent with findings in the total bulk dust samples, these samples were found to contain Ca, sulfur, and Ca-carbon particles. Levels of Ca ranged from 22 to 33%, and sulfur (as sulfate sulfate, chemical compound containing the sulfate (SO4) radical. Sulfates are salts or esters of sulfuric acid, H2SO4, formed by replacing one or both of the hydrogens with a metal (e.g., sodium) or a radical (e.g., ammonium or ethyl). ) ranged from 37 to 43%. Only very low levels of transition and metallic elements were present. These samples were administered to mice by aspiration in doses of 10, 31.6, or 100 [micro]g. The samples administered included WTC P[M.sub.2.5] from seven individual collection sites, a sample pooled from these seven locations (WTCX), and a sieved sample from an eighth location (WTC3). Comparison P[M.sub.2.5] samples were derived from Mount Saint Helen's dust, residual oil fly ash (ROFA ROFA Rotating Over Fire Air ), and NIST Standard Reference Material 1649a (urban PM from Washington, DC).

Results. Aspirated samples of WTCX P[M.sub.2.5] were found to induce a mild to moderate degree of pulmonary inflammation in rodents at a relatively high dose (100 [micro]g) (Figure 7). This inflammatory response was not as great as that caused by ROFA or NIST 1649a (Gavett et al. 2003).

[FIGURE 7 OMITTED]

A 100-[micro]g dose of WTC P[M.sub.2.5] was found to cause a striking degree of airway hyperresponsiveness to methacholine aerosol. This hyperresponsiveness was comparable with that produced by NIST 1649a and greater than that produced by ROFA (Figure 8). Although the pulmonary neutrophilic neutrophilic /neu·tro·phil·ic/ (-fil´ik)
1. pertaining to neutrophils.

2. stainable by neutral dyes.


neutrophilic

1. pertaining to neutrophils.

2. stainable by neutral dyes.
 inflammation observed in exposed mice diminished 1-3 days after exposure, the hyperresponsiveness to methacholine did not diminish significantly in that time period.

[FIGURE 8 OMITTED]

Mice exposed to lower doses of pooled WTC P[M.sub.2.5] (10 [micro]g and 31.6 [micro]g) and mice exposed by nose-only inhalation manifested neither neutrophilic inflammation nor methacholine responsiveness. No variation in response was noted in relation to the geographical locations at which the dust samples had been collected.

Pregnant women and their offspring. Many pregnant women were either working in the WTC or working or residing in the communities of lower Manhattan on 11 September 2001. To assess pregnancy outcomes in these women and impacts on their infants, teams from the 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.
 and the Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University established complementary prospective epidemiologic cohort studies.

Populations. The Mount Sinai population consisted of 187 pregnant women who were either in or near the WTC on 11 September (Berkowitz et al. 2003). Twelve were actually inside the towers, and an additional 122 (65%) were within 10 blocks. A comparison group (n = 2,367) consisted of all private patients not known to have been near the WTC who delivered at Mount Sinai Hospital Mount Sinai Hospital can refer to:
  • Mount Sinai Hospital (Toronto)
  • Mount Sinai Hospital, New York
  • Mount Sinai Medical Center & Miami Heart Institute
  • Mount Sinai Hospital, Cleveland
  • Mount Sinai Hospital, Chicago
  • Mount Sinai Hospital, Milwaukee
 during the same time period.

The racial/ethnic composition of the exposed group in the Mount Sinai study was 72.5% white, 11.0% African American, 6.6% Hispanic, 3.9% Asian, and 6.0% of mixed or other race/ethnicity. Participants were relatively old: 15.4% were younger than 30 years of age, 40.1% were 30-34 years of age, 33.0% were 35-39 years of age, and 11.5% were [greater than or equal to] 40 years of age. The women in the Mount Sinai study were evenly distributed by 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. Of the 187 women originally recruited into the study, 3 miscarried and 2 were lost to follow-up, leaving 182 participants with live births. The last delivery occurred in June 2002. Deliveries took place at 47 hospitals in the New York City area. The Mount Sinai School of Medicine team is collaborating with EOHSI exposure modelers who are developing individualized exposure profiles for each woman based on their location (e.g., in an affected structure, in a downwind location) and the time spent in each location (indoors and outdoors) in the days and weeks after 11 September.

The population in the Columbia study consisted of 329 women who were recruited when they arrived in labor at one of three hospitals in lower Manhattan (Beth Israel Medical Center Beth Israel Medical Center is a hospital in New York City. It has four major locations providing health services. It acts as University Hospital and Manhattan Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. , NYU Downtown Hospital, as well as its affiliated St. Vincent's Hospital Hospital:
  • St. Vincent's Hospital, Birmingham, Alabama
  • St. Vincent's Hospital, Indianapolis, Indiana
  • St. Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia
  • St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, Australia
  • St. Vincent's Hospital, New York City
  • St.
 and Medical Center, and its affiliated Elizabeth Seton Childbearing Center). Women were eligible to participate if they were between 18 and 39 years of age, were not having a multiple birth, had not smoked during pregnancy, did not report having had any of a list of specified health conditions, and provided a maternal (n = 211) and/or cord (n = 290) blood sample. Women's eligibility for participation in the exposed (n = 160) or control (n = 169) groups was based on the distance of their residence and work sites from the WTC and the number of hours they had spent at these locations during the 2 weeks after 11 September 2001. All women were enrolled between 13 December 2001 and 27 June 2002.

The 329 women in the final Columbia sample were 40% white, 34% Asian, 15% African American, and 10% "other" or not reported. Twenty-one percent also identified themselves as Hispanic. The languages of interviews were English, 76%; Mandarin, 21%, Spanish, 1.5%, and Cantonese, 1.2%. Over 80% of the women were married or cohabiting > 7 years. Average educational attainment was 13.9 years; 18.5% of the subjects did not have a high school diploma A high school diploma is a diploma awarded for the completion of high school. In the United States and Canada, it is considered the minimum education required for government jobs and higher education. An equivalent is the GED. , and 42% had at least a college degree. Household incomes of [less than or equal to] $50,000 were reported by 55.7% of the women who reported incomes.

Continuing follow-up. The Mount Sinai team is currently following the infants. In addition to obtaining indices of growth, two assessments of early cognitive development have been performed: the Fagan Infantest and the Visual Expectation Paradigm (Canfield et al. 1997; Canfield and Kirkham 2001; Jacobson et al. 1992; Shepherd and Fagan 1987). To date, cognitive assessments at 9 months of age have been completed on 159 infants. Further follow-up assessments are planned to at least 3 years of age.

In the Columbia study, participants were reinterviewed by phone when infants reached 6 months of age. Information was sought regarding the diet of each child as well as breast-feeding breast-feeding /breast-feed·ing/ (brest´fed?ing) nursing; the feeding of an infant at the mother's breast.  patterns. All hospitalizations and their causes were recorded. Two hundred ninety-four women completed this interview. To assess cognitive and motor function, the Bayley Scales of Infant Development Bay·ley Scales of Infant Development
pl.n.
Standardized tests used to assess the mental, motor, and behavioral progress of children during the first two and one-half years of life.
 (Bayley and Gyurke 1993) is being administered at the 1-year follow-up visit. Each child's weight, height, and head circumference were measured. The mother was reinterviewed at this meeting to determine any changes in key variables, to obtain details about the mother's and infant's health and postnatal postnatal /post·na·tal/ (-na´t'l) occurring after birth, with reference to the newborn.

post·na·tal
adj.
Of or occurring after birth, especially in the period immediately after birth.
 exposures, and to complete the list of the infant's hospitalizations through the first year of life.

Pregnancy outcomes. In the Mount Sinai cohort, no significant differences were found between the groups in mean gestational age or mean birth weight. There were no significant differences in frequency of preterm preterm /pre·term/ (-term´) before completion of the full term; said of pregnancy or of an infant.

pre·term
adj.
 births (< 37 weeks of gestation) or in incidence of low birth weight (Table 2) (Berkowitz et al. 2003).

However, the Mount Sinai WTC cohort had a 2-fold increased risk of small-for-gestational-age (SGA) infants, defined as infants with a birth weight below the 10th percentile for gestational age in the nomogram nomogram /nom·o·gram/ (nom´o-gram) a graph with several scales arranged so that a straightedge laid on the graph intersects the scales at related values of the variables; the values of any two variables can be used to find the values of  of Brenner et al. (1976) (Table 2). This statistically significant difference was still evident after controlling for relevant covariates and potential confounders, including maternal age, parity, race/ethnicity, sex of the infant, and maternal smoking history. No significant difference in the frequency of SGA infants was observed according to the trimester of pregnancy on 11 September. No associations were evident between symptoms of posttraumatic posttraumatic /posttrau·mat·ic/ (post?traw-mat´ik) occurring as a result of or after injury.

post·trau·mat·ic
adj.
Following or resulting from injury or trauma.
 stress, based on the PTSD Checklist (Schlenger et al. 2002), and frequency of preterm birth, low birth weight, or SGA infants.

In the Columbia study, there was no difference between the exposed and control groups in newborn birth weight (3,377 vs. 3,459 g), length, head circumference, or Apgar scores, but gestation duration was significantly shorter in the exposed group (274.3 vs. 275.9 days; p = 0.045). The study groups did not differ significantly in maternal age, height, prepregnancy weight, parity, or marital status, but the exposed group had 1 more year of education (14.4 vs. 13.4 years; p < 0.05).

Discussion

This report presents the most comprehensive summary to date of the environmental exposures resulting from the attack on the WTC and of their effects on human health. Our main focus was on chemical exposures. Our findings complement earlier reports describing the acute physical consequences of the disaster (CDC 2002; Prezant et al. 2002) and its psychological impacts (Boscarino et al. 2002; Fairbrother et al. 2003; Galea et al. 2002a, 2002b; Stuber et al. 2002; Vlahov et al. 2002a, 2002b).

Our assessments show that exposures to chemical contaminants were not uniform in New York after 11 September (Clark et al. 2003; Lioy et al. 2002; McGee et al. 2003; Offenberg et al. 2003). Instead, there were sharp gradients by time after the attack and by distance from Ground Zero (Table 1). In the first few hours, extremely heavy exposures to high levels of dust and smoke as well as to gaseous products of combustion predominated. This pattern continued for the next 2 days, when there occurred rapid decline of smoke and dust levels and continuing decline in levels of combustion products as jet fuel and flammable building contents were consumed. A large fraction of the outdoor dust was eliminated over the first weekend after the disaster by rain that fell on Friday, 14 September, and by the U.S. EPA's cleanup of the Wall Street area. Over the next several weeks, airborne particulate levels in lower Manhattan continued to decline but rose intermittently at night and when the air was still. Transient increases were noted also when the pile was disturbed and fires flared. Diesel exhaust became an important contaminant with the arrival on site of scores of cranes, heavy trucks, and other construction equipment. For weeks, an acrid cloud hung over lower Manhattan and areas of Brooklyn until the fires were finally extinguished on 20 December.

Asbestos was of great concern to the public in New York City and to government agencies after 11 September. Asbestos, principally chrysotile, was used in the early 1970s in construction of the WTC as fireproofing fireproofing, method of making normally combustible materials as nearly noncombustible as possible. Fireproofing generally applies to textiles and construction materials that are treated with a solution or coating of some substance that will tend to retard their  up to the 40th floor of the North Tower (Nicholson et al. 1971; Reitze et al. 1972). Asbestos was not used beyond that point because of the recognition of its hazard and its replacement in the remainder of the construction with non-asbestiform fireproofing materials. Although some of this asbestos had been removed over the preceding 30 years, hundreds of tons remained on 11 September 2001 and were blasted free. Ambient air samples showed that asbestos exposures were initially elevated but fell to within U.S. EPA standards after the first few days (U.S. EPA 2004). Asbestos was found in settled dust at Ground Zero in concentrations ranging from 0.8 to 3.0% (Lioy et al. 2002). Asbestos was found in dust in nearby apartments, sometimes at higher levels than in the outside environment (Lioy et al. 2002).

Airborne lead levels were elevated in the first days after 11 September, but never highly. There is little indication that ambient air lead exposures posed substantial health risks to the population of lower Manhattan (U.S. EPA 2004).

Airborne dioxin levels were elevated substantially above normal urban background levels in the initial days after 11 September. The U.S. EPA's initial risk analysis suggests that these elevations did not result in a significant elevation in cancer or noncancer risk (U.S. EPA 2003). Further follow-up of exposed populations will be required to evaluate the accuracy of that assessment.

Risks to health were determined by the timing, duration, and chemical composition of exposures as well as by proximity to Ground Zero. Firefighters, police, and other first responders sustained heaviest initial exposures. Studies of firefighters confirmed the presence of a positive relationship between intensity and duration of exposure and severity of pulmonary effects (Figure 6) (Prezant et al. 2002) as well as of PM levels in sputum. Prolonged exposures occurred among firefighters and other public safety personnel who remained at Ground Zero as well as among construction workers, volunteers, and workers removing rubble (Levin et al. 2002; Lippy 2002). Workers cleaning nearby buildings may also have sustained potentially serious exposures (Malievskaya et al. 2002).

Health data from the study of rubble removal workers confirm that these workers, many of whom worked at Ground Zero for many months, had sustained clinically significant exposures to airborne irritants, resulting in symptoms consistent with upper and lower airway inflammation (Levin et al. 2002). To extend these initial studies, the team at Mount Sinai has initiated the World Trade Center Worker and Volunteer Medical Screening Program. This program, supported by NIOSH, has already examined more than 10,000 workers. These workers will be followed prospectively to assess long-term and delayed effects.

Toxicologic studies have elucidated the pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying the clinical findings seen in worker populations (Gavett et al. 2003). High-dose exposures to fine airborne particulates (P[M.sub.2.5]) from the WTC, such as occurred in the immediate aftermath of the collapse, were shown in mice to produce mild to moderate degrees of respiratory inflammation and a very striking degree of hyperresponsiveness of airways. A property of the dust that appears to have contributed to its intense respiratory irritability was its high alkalinity (Lioy et al. 2002; McGee et al. 2003). Larger particles composed principally of cement dust were especially alkaline (pH 9.0-11.0). These particles were of a size likely to be caught in the upper airways. Along with inhaled glass fibers, they were probably responsible for the intense irritation of the nasal passages as well as for the chronic debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing
adj.
Causing a loss of strength or energy.


Debilitating
Weakening, or reducing the strength of.

Mentioned in: Stress Reduction
 cough observed in heavily exposed populations (Chen and Thurston 2002; Scanlon 2002; Thurston and Chen 2002).

Further experiments will be necessary to determine whether the pulmonary hyperresponsiveness observed in mice is persistent. Such research may provide insights also into the anticipated duration of the pulmonary effects in workers. Factors that may influence persistence in workers include level of exposure, use of respiratory protection, individual differences in sensitivity, and interspecies differences.

Airborne exposures in the residential and business communities of lower Manhattan beyond Ground Zero were much lower than those sustained by workers (U.S. EPA 2004). Daily average levels of fine particulate pollution in these communities were generally within U.S. EPA limits when averaged over a 24-hr period. Higher short-term peaks were, however, observed especially at night and could have contributed to reported health effects, especially in susceptible populations such as children, the elderly, and persons with respiratory or cardiac disease. Indoor exposures to resuspended dust may have added to total exposures (Lioy et al. 2002). Residents in these communities reported an increased frequency of new-onset pulmonary symptoms (Reibman et al. 2003) but had no abnormalities on pulmonary function testing. These findings are consistent with the observed gradient of exposures.

An increase in incidence of SGA was the major adverse health effect seen in infants born to women who were inside the towers or within approximately 10 blocks of the WTC on 11 September (Berkowitz et al. 2003). Incidence of SGA infants was 2-fold greater among the WTC mothers than in a demographically similar comparison population not known to have been in lower Manhattan on 11 September 2001 (p < 0.01).

SGA is an index of intrauterine growth restriction intrauterine growth restriction
n.
See intrauterine growth retardation.


intrauterine growth retardation Fetal growth restriction Neonatology A generic term for any delay in achieving intrauterine developmental
 (IUGR IUGR intrauterine growth retardation (or restriction).

IUGR
abbr.
intrauterine growth retardation


IUGR Intrauterine growth retardation, see there
). Biologically plausible causes of IUGR in these babies include exposures to fine PM and PAHs. Previous studies have found associations between particulate air pollution and IUGR (Bobak et al. 2001; Dejmek et al. 1999); other investigations have linked air pollution to preterm births (Ritz et al. 2000). High levels of PAH-DNA adducts in umbilical cord leukocytes have been associated with reduced birth size (Perera et al. 1998). Prenatal exposure to cigarette smoke, which contains PAHs among other toxins, is a well-established risk factor for IUGR. Maternal stress is another possible cause of the observed increase in SGA, but we were unable to detect any correlation between reported levels of stress and SGA incidence.

Important questions about possible future risks to health of persons exposed to contaminants from the WTC remain unanswered:

* Will pulmonary disease persist in workers exposed to dust, especially in those who sustained very heavy exposures in the first days after 11 September and those with prolonged exposures?

* Will an increased incidence of mesothelioma result from exposures to asbestos? All types of asbestos fibers have been shown in laboratory as well as clinical studies to be capable of causing mesothelioma (Nicholson and Landrigan 1996). Pathologic studies have found short chrysotile fibers, the predominant type of fiber in WTC dust, to be the predominant fiber in mesothelioma tissue (Dodson et al. 1991; LeBouffant et al. 1973; Suzuki and Yuen 2002). Mesothelioma has been reported in persons with relatively low-dose, nonoccupational exposure to asbestos (Anderson 1982; Camus et al. 1998; Magnani et al. 2001). The greatest future risk of mesothelioma would appear to exist among first responders who were enveloped en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 in the cloud Refers to the operation taking place within a network. See cloud.  of dust, other workers employed directly at Ground Zero, and workers employed in cleaning asbestos-laden dust from contaminated buildings. The risk of mesothelinma to residents of lower Manhattan must be considered to be extremely low but may still be elevated above background.

* Will exposure to airborne dioxin in lower Manhattan in the days and weeks after 11 September increase risk of cancer, diabetes, or other chronic disease (Kogevinas 2001)?

* Will the increased frequency of SGA observed in babies born to women who were within or near the WTC on 11 September result in long-term adverse effects on growth or development (Berkowitz et al. 2003)?

Full elucidation of these and other questions concerning the long-term and delayed health effects of exposures resulting from the attack on the WTC will require continuing, prospective, multiyear clinical and epidemiologic follow-up and further refinement of exposure assessments. That work is under way.
Table 1. Sequence of environmental exposures after the
attack on the WTC, September through December 2001.

                      Predominant sources
Time period              of pollution            Airborne pollutants

First 12 hr after   Burning jet fuel          Combustion products: gas-
collapse (11        Fires                       eous and particulate
September 2001)     Collapse of the Twin      Evaporating gases from
                      Towers                    the collapse of towers
                                              Coarse particles

Days 1 and 2        Burning jet fuel          Combustion products: gas-
                    Resuspension of settled     eous and particulate
                      dust/smoke              Gases evaporating from
                                                piles
                                              Resuspended coarse
                                                particles

Days 3-13           Smoldering fires          Combustion products: gas-
                    Resuspension of settled     eous and particulate
                      dust/smoke              Coarse particle
                                                resuspension
                                              Diesel exhaust

Day 14 through 20   Smoldering fires with     Combustion products: gas-
  December 2001       occasional flareups       es and particulates
                    Removal of debris by      Diesel exhaust
                      trucks and other
                       heavy equipment

Data from Lioy et al. (2002).

Table 2. Pregnancy outcomes in relation to the attack on the
WTC, September 2001 through June 2002.

                                    WTC group   Control group   p-Value

No                                     187          2,367          --
Mean gestational age (weeks)          39.1          39.0          0.55
Mean birth weight (g)                 3,203         3,267         0.14
Frequency of preterm birth (%)         9.9           9.2          0.76
Frequency of low birth weight (%)      8.2           6.8          0.47
Frequency of SGA infants (%)           8.2           3.8        < 0.01

Data from Berkowitz et al. (2003).

Figure 6. Prevalence of persistent cough in New
York City firefighters exposed to smoke and dust
from the WTC, Septembe 2001 through March 2002.
Data from Prezant et al. (2002).

Exposure category

           Prevalence (%)

Low        n = 1,320
Moderate   n = 6,958
High       n = 1,636

Note: Table made from bar graph.


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Philip J. Landrigan, (1) Paul J. Lioy, (2) George Thurston, (3) Gertrud Berkowitz, (1) L.C. Chen, (3) Steven N. Chillrud, (4) Stephen H. Gavett, (5) Panos G. Georgopoulos, (2) Alison S. Geyh, (6) Stephen Levin, (1) Frederica Perera, (7) Stephen M. Rappaport, (8) Christopher Small, (4) and the NIEHS World Trade Center Working Group *

(1) Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA; (2) Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick New Jersey is a Canadian rural community in Northumberland County, New Brunswick.

Coordinates:  
, New Jersey, USA; (3) New York University School of Medicine, Nelson Institute of Environmental Medicine, Tuxedo, New York Tuxedo is a town located in Orange County, New York. As of the 2000 census, the town had a total population of 3,334. The town is in the southeastern part of the county. NY Route 17 and the New York State Thruway (Interstate 87) pass through the town. , USA; (4) Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, New York Palisades, New York is a very small hamlet, part of the Town of Orangetown, located in southeastern Rockland County, New York. It borders the Hudson River to the east, Rockleigh and Alpine New Jersey to the south, Tappan to the west, and Sparkill to the north. , USA; (5) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Research Triangle Park Research Triangle Park, research, business, medical, and educational complex situated in central North Carolina. It has an area of 6,900 acres (2,795 hectares) and is 8 × 2 mi (13 × 3 km) in size. Named for the triangle formed by Duke Univ. , North Carolina, USA; (6) Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA; (7) Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University, New York, New York, USA; (8) School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina Chapel Hill is a town in North Carolina and the home of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-CH), the oldest state-supported university in the United States. As of the 2000 census, it had a population of 48,715. As of 2004 its estimated population was 52,440. , USA

Address correspondence to P.J. Landrigan, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1057, New York, NY 10029 USA. Telephone: (212) 241-4804. Fax: (212) 996-0407. E-mail: phil.landrigan@mssm.edu

* The NIEHS World Trade Center Working Group includes Mark Becker, Patrick N. Breysse, Beverly Cohen, Max Costa, Christos Efstathiou, Steven Eisenreich, Gary Foley, Robert Frank, John K. McGee, John D. Groopman, Robin Herbert, Julie Herbstman, Eric Jayjock, Michaela Kendall, Sally A. Lederman, H.J. Lim, Morton Lippmann, Polina Maciejczyk, J. Millette, Ady Miretzky, Sheung P. Ng, John H. Offenberg, Haluk A. Ozkaynak, Joachim D. Pleil, Francesca Pozzi, Chunli Quan, Joan Reibman, J. Ross, Jonathan M. Samet, Regina M. Santella, Margo Schwab, Pamela Shade, Mary Sobo, G. Stenchikov, Qing Sun, J. Morel morel

Any of various species of edible mushrooms in the genera Morchella and Verpa. Morels have a convoluted or pitted head, or cap, vary in shape, and occur in diverse habitats. The edible M.
 Symons, Barbara Turpin, Vikram Vyas, Sheng sheng

(Chinese; “sage” or “saint”)

In Chinese belief, a mortal who attains extraordinary or supernatural powers by self-cultivation and serves as a model for others. Confucius used the term to refer to exemplary rulers of the past.
 Wei Wang, Clifford P. Weisel, D'Ann L. Williams, Mary S. Wolff, Lih Ming Yiin, Mianhua Zhong, and Michael A. Gallo.

We thank S. Perry and R. Thompson of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for their guidance on atmospheric modeling.

This research was supported by grants from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) through the Superfund Basic Research Program The Superfund Basic Research Program (SBRP) was created within the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in 1986 under the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA).  (P42 ES07384 to Mount Sinai School of Medicine and P42 ES05948 to UNC-Chapel Hill); through grants from the Centers for Environmental Health Science (P30 ES09089-04S at Columbia University; P30 ES00260 at New York University (NYU); P30 ES03819 at Johns Hopkins University; P30 ES05022 at The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey is the state-run health sciences institution of New Jersey and comprises eight distinct academic units: the New Jersey Medical School, the New Jersey Dental School, the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, the School of  (UMDNJ UMDNJ University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey ); by the U.S. EPA through the Particulate Matter Health Research Center Program (R827351 at NYU) and a university partnership between the National Exposure Research Laboratory and the Enviromnental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (CR-827033 at UMDNJ); and by grants from 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 (NYTF NYTF New York Teaching Fellows  CU517002 and SEPELES CU 517438 to Columbia University and MSSM 0266-0507 to Mount Sinai School of Medicine.

This manuscript was reviewed and approved for release by the National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, U.S. EPA. Approval does not signify, that the contents necessarily reflect the views and policies of the U.S. EPA, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use.

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.

Received 27 August 2003; accepted 18 February 2004.
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Author:Small, Christopher
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:May 1, 2004
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