scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Human exposure assessment in air pollution systems.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Results from many exposure studies indicate that people are very likely to receive the greatest exposure to many toxic air pollutants not outside but inside places such as homes, offices, and automobiles.
Abstract
The air pollution problem can be depicted as a system consisting of several basic components: source, concentration, exposure, dose, and adverse effects. Exposure, the contact between an agent (e.g., an air pollutant) and a target (e.g., a human respiratory tract), is the key to linking the pollution source and health effects. Human exposure to air pollutants depends on exposure concentration and exposure duration. Exposure concentration is the concentration of a pollutant at a contact boundary, which usually refers to the human breathing zone. However, ambient concentrations of regulated pollutants at monitoring sites have been measured in practice to represent actual exposure. This can be a valid practice if the pollutants are ones that are predominantly generated outdoors and if the monitoring sites are appropriately selected to reflect where people are. Results from many exposure studies indicate that people are very likely to receive the greatest exposure to many toxic air pollutants not outside but inside places such as homes, offices, and automobiles. For many of these pollutants, major sources of exposure can be quite different from major sources of emission. This is because a large emission source can have a very small value of exposure effectiveness, i.e., the fraction of pollutant released from a source that actually reaches the human breathing zone. Exposure data are crucial to risk management decisions for setting priorities, selecting cost-effective approaches to preventing or reducing risks, and evaluating risk mitigation efforts. Measurement or estimate of exposure is essential but often inadequately addressed in environmental epidemiologic studies. Exposure can be quantified using direct or indirect measurement methods, depending upon the purpose of exposure assessment and the availability of relevant data. The rapidly developing battery and electronic technologies as well as advancements in molecular biology are expected to accelerate the improvement of current methods and the development of new methods for future exposure assessment.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Benzene exposure: an overview of monitoring methods and their findings.

TL;DR: The biomarker studies suggest benzene environmental exposures are in the sub to low ppb range though non-benzene sources for urinary metabolites, differences in metabolic rates compared to occupational or animal doses, and the presence of polymorphisms need to be considered when evaluating risks from environmental exposures to individuals or potentially susceptible populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial and Temporal Dynamics in Air Pollution Exposure Assessment.

TL;DR: This review suggests that the spatial and temporal variability of urban air pollution levels in combination with indoor exposures and individual’s time-activity patterns are key elements of personal exposure assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early life stress, air pollution, inflammation, and disease: An integrative review and immunologic model of social-environmental adversity and lifespan health.

TL;DR: How exposure to two risk factors that commonly occur with social disadvantage—early life stress and air pollution—affect health is examined to propose an integrated, multi‐level model that describes how these factors may interact and cause health disparity across individuals based on social disadvantage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of exhaled breath biomarkers in environmental health science.

TL;DR: Successful environmental health applications of exhaled breath are described and future research directions from the perspective of U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) human exposure research are proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential expression of 10 sweetpotato peroxidases in response to sulfur dioxide, ozone, and ultraviolet radiation.

TL;DR: Results indicated that some specific POD isoenzymes might be specifically involved in the defense mechanism against oxidative stress induced by air pollutants and UV radiation in sweetpotato plants.
References
More filters

Atmospheric chemistry and physics: from air pollution to climate change.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a model for the chemistry of the Troposphere of the atmosphere and describe the properties of the Atmospheric Aqueous phase of single aerosol particles.
Book

Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics: From Air Pollution to Climate Change

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model for the chemistry of the Troposphere of the atmosphere and describe the properties of the Atmospheric Aqueous phase of single aerosol particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Indoor particles: a review.

TL;DR: Three major studies of indoor and outdoor concentrations in U.S. homes are summarized in detail and compared, and the protective effect of reducing air exchange rates during periods of high outdoor particle pollution can thus be quantified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemistry and Physiology of Los Angeles Smog

TL;DR: In this paper, the photochemical action of nitrogen oxides oxidizes the hydrocarbons and thereby forms ozone, responsible for rubber cracking, giving eye irritation and crop damage resembling closely that observed on smog days.
Related Papers (5)