Mortality from copper smelter emissions circa 1967.The correspondence section is a public forum and, as such, is not peer-reviewed. EHP EHP abbr. 1. effective horsepower 2. electric horsepower is not responsible for the accuracy, currency, or reliability of personal opinion expressed herein; it is the sole responsibility of the authors. EHP neither endorses nor disputes their published commentary. Pope et al. (2007) found lowered monthly mortality rates during a 1967-1968 copper smelter strike, coincident with and attributed to widespread reduced airborne 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). levels. The authors cited three "intervention" studies associating particulate emissions reductions with mortality reductions as supportive. Evidence below suggests that mortality reductions in the study by Pope et al. and "interventions" are likely linked to reductions in 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. (PM) types known to be harmful: high levels of biologically active metals and partially burned carbon. The first "intervention" study (Pope et al. 1992), examined PM-mortality associations over 4 years, encompassing closure of a Utah steel mill (sulfate not measured; sulfur dioxide sulfur dioxide, chemical compound, SO2, a colorless gas with a pungent, suffocating odor. It is readily soluble in cold water, sparingly soluble in hot water, and soluble in alcohol, acetic acid, and sulfuric acid. levels were "low"). Mortality rates were 40% greater than expected when the mill was operating, suggesting toxicity of mill emissions. Strongest associations were with respiratory disease Noun 1. respiratory disease - a disease affecting the respiratory system respiratory disorder, respiratory illness adult respiratory distress syndrome, ARDS, wet lung, white lung - acute lung injury characterized by coughing and rales; inflammation of the , then cardiovascular disease Cardiovascular disease Disease that affects the heart and blood vessels. Mentioned in: Lipoproteins Test cardiovascular disease . Filter extracts when the mill was operating contained high levels of lead, copper, and zinc and were more toxic (Frampton et al. 1999). Mattson and Guidotti (1980) found women living in communities near copper smelters (1968-1975) in Arizona experienced highly elevated relative risks (RRs) for acute respiratory disease mortality: averaged RR for all six mining towns (40,000 combined population) was 5.61. Later, Small et al. (1981) found levels of arsenic, Cu, and Zn elevated by factors up to 100,000 in Arizona smelter plumes. Lead levels in plumes were comparable with those of other metals. Thus, Pb, Cu, and Zn levels were elevated when either the steel mill or copper smelters were operating, and acute mortality (especially respiratory) was elevated simultaneously. Mortality associations with blood Pb have recently been found at low levels of Pb (Menke et al. 2006). Blood Pb has a half-life of about 1 month, reflecting current exposure; associations may indicate both chronic and acute effects (Schober et al. 2006)--relevant information for copper smelter emissions. The second "intervention" study (Hedley et al. 2002) found mortality rate reductions following a mandated 1990 reduction of sulfur in residual oil residual oil n. The low-grade oil products that remain after the distillation of petroleum, used in adhesives, roofing compounds, and asphalt manufacture. Noun 1. and diesel fuels in Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov. . Later, Hedley et al. (2006) found that ambient vanadium vanadium (vənā`dēəm), metallic chemical element; symbol V; at. no. 23; at. wt. 50.9415; m.p. about 1,890°C;; b.p. 3,380°C;; sp. gr. about 6 at 20°C;; valence +2, +3, +4, or +5. Vanadium is a soft, ductile, silver-grey metal. and nickel were reduced up to 90%, concomitantly with reductions of sulfur in residual oil. Mortality or inflammatory associations with ambient residual oil emissions but not secondary sulfate were previously found (Grahame and Hidy 2004; Janssen et al. 2002; Maciejczyk and Chen 2005). The third "intervention" (Clancy et al. 2002) found that mortality rates declined after uncontrolled domestic burning of coal was banned in Dublin, Ireland. Wintertime black smoke levels declined from 80 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] before the ban to 20 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] afterward; sulfate was not measured. Given the toxicology of partly burned hydrocarbons, mortality reduction would be expected. The three "supporting" studies do not provide evidence that widespread secondary sulfate reductions were related to mortality reductions during the interventions. Rather, high levels of specific metals, or of black smoke, appear to have health relevance. Toxicology suggests secondary sulfates per se are unlikely to be harmful at ambient levels (Schlesinger and Cassee 2003). Resolving this inconsistency requires researching mechanisms by which secondary sulfate or precursors are necessary to create a toxic mixture at ambient levels; for example, how much do which metals increase in solubility due to such processes, and how much harm occurs that would not otherwise occur? Either soluble or insoluble metals common to steel mills and copper smelter emissions can be harmful at high doses (Ghio et al. 1999). Research suggestions are available (Grahame and Schlesinger (2007). The author declares he has no competing financial interests. REFERENCES Clancy L, Goodman P, Sinclair H, Dockery DW. 2002. Effect of air-pollution control on death rates in Dublin, Ireland: an intervention study. Lancet 360:1210-1214. Frampton MW, Ghio AJ, Samet JM, Carson JL, Carter JD, Devlin RB. 1999. Effects of aqueous extracts of PM10 filters from the Utah Valley Utah Valley is a valley in North Central Utah located in Utah County, and is considered part of the Wasatch Front. It contains Provo, Orem, and their suburbs, including Spanish Fork and American Fork. Utah Lake is a natural shallow fresh water lake in its center. on human airway epithelial cells Epithelial cells Cells that form a thin surface coating on the outside of a body structure. Mentioned in: Corneal Transplantation . Am J Physiol 277(5 Pt 1):L960-L967. Ghio AJ, Stonehuerner J, Dailey L, Carter JD. 1999. Metals associated with both the water-soluble and insoluble fractions of an ambient air pollution particle catalyze an oxidative stress oxidative stress, n an imbalance of the prooxidant antioxidant ratio in which too few antioxidants are produced or ingested or too many oxidizing agents are produced. . Inhal Toxicol 11:37-49. Grahame T, Hidy G. 2004. Using factor analysis to attribute health impacts to particulate pollution sources. Inhal Toxicol 16(suppl 1):143-152. Grahame TJ, Schlesinger RB. 2007. Health effects of airborne particulate matter: do we know enough to consider regulating specific particle pypes or sources? Inhal Toxicol 19:457-481. Hedley AJ, McGhee SM, Wong CM, Barron B, Chau P, Chau J, et al. 2006. Air Pollution: Costs and Paths to a Solution. Hong Kong:Civic Exchange. Available: http://www.civicexchange. org/publications/2006/VisibilityandHealthE.pdf [accessed 1 August 2007]. Janssen NAH, Schwartz J, Zanobetti A, Suh HH. 2002. Air conditioning air conditioning, mechanical process for controlling the humidity, temperature, cleanliness, and circulation of air in buildings and rooms. Indoor air is conditioned and regulated to maintain the temperature-humidity ratio that is most comfortable and healthful. and source-specific particles as modifiers of the effect of [PM.sub.10] on hospital admissions for heart and lung disease lung disease Pulmonary disease Pulmonology Any condition causing or indicating impaired lung function Types of LD Obstructive lung disease–↓ in air flow caused by a narrowing or blockage of airways–eg, asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis; . Environ Health Perspect 110:43-49. Maciejczyk P, Chen LC. 2005. Effects of subchronic exposures to concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) in mice: VIII. Source-related daily variations in in vitro in vitro /in vi·tro/ (in ve´tro) [L.] within a glass; observable in a test tube; in an artificial environment. in vi·tro adj. In an artificial environment outside a living organism. responses to CAPs. Inhal Toxicol 17:243-253. Mattson ME, Guidotti TL. 1980. Health risks associated with residence near a primary copper smelter: a preliminary report. Am J Ind Med 1:365-374. Menke A, Muntner P, Batuman V, Silbergeld EK, Guallar E. 2006. Blood lead below 0.48 mmol/L (10 mg/dL) and mortality among U.S. adults. Circulation 114:1388-1394. Pope CA III CA III Challenge Athena version III (Navy SATCOM link) , Rodermund DL, Gee MM. 2007. Mortality effects of a copper smelter strike and reduced ambient sulfate particulate matter pollution. Environ Health Perspect 115:679-683. Pope CA III, Schwartz J, Ransom MR. 1992. Daily mortality and [PM.sub.10] pollution in the Utah Valley. Arch Environ Health 47:211-217. Schlesinger RB, Cassee F. 2003. Atmospheric secondary inorganic particulate matter: the toxicological perspective as a basis for health effects risk assessment. Inhal Toxicol 15:197-235. Schober SE, Mirel LB, Graubard BI, Brody DJ, Flegal KM. 2006. Blood lead levels and death from all causes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer: results from the NHANES III NHANES III Third National Health & Nutrition Examination Survey Public health A population-based survey conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics, designed to assess the health and nutritional status of the noninstitutionalized Americans mortality study. Environ Health Perspect 114:1538-1541 Small M, Germani MS, Small AM, Zoller WH. 1981. Airborne plume study of emissions from the processing of copper ores Copper ores may refer to:
doi:10.1289/ehp.10441 Thomas J. Grahame U.S. Department of Energy Washington, DC E-mail: thomas.grahame@hq.doe.gov |
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