Search results for " Medical Geochemistry"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

SOURCE RECOGNITION OF INHALED ATMOSPHERIC PARTICLES ACCORDING TO GEOCHEMICAL AND STATISTICAL EVALUATIONS OF TRACE ELEMENT SIGNATURES

2011

During 2001 the Mount Etna had a large eruption producing a large amount of pyroclastic products consisting of a mixture of glass, minerals and soluble salt materials (SAF) encrusting solid particles. Inhalation of the finest of these materials induced pulmonary diseases in people living in subjected areas and gave us the possibility to collect bronchoalveolar lavages (BAL) from people in care in Catania hospitals. Concentrations of several trace elements measured in these BAL fluids (BALF) evidence strong enrichments in several trace elements compared to reference values. Related enrichments factors, calculated with respect to composition of volcanic ejecta (EFASH), show similar values in …

Bronchoalveolar fluids Lanthanides Medical GeochemistrySettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Medical Geochemistry

2013

Preface.- How trace element contents in bronchoalveolar lavages can probe the human exposure to inhaled particulates.- Geochemistry and Biochemistry - insights into the fate and transport of Pt-based chemotherapy drugs.- Atmospheric Particulate Matter (PM) in the Middle East: Toxicity, trans-boundary transport and influence of synoptic conditions.- Reaction path modeling: theoretical aspects and applications.- An observation on the composition of urinary calculi: environment influence.- Magnetite minerals in the human brain: what's their role?.- Chemometrics and Medical Geochemistry: A brief tutorial.- Dust, metals and metalloids in the environment: from air to hair.- Metal Geochemistry of …

Chemotherapy DrugsEnvironmental chemistryGeochemistry medical geochemistryTrace element compositionGeochemistryTrace elementHuman boneMetalloidGeological materialsReaction pathParticulatesGeology
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preface

2013

Geochemistry Medical Geochemistry
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Source and Nature of Inhaled Atmospheric Dust from Trace Element Analyses of Human Bronchial Fluids

2011

International audience; Rapid volcanic eruptions quickly ejecting large amounts of dust provoke the accumulation of heavy metals in people living in surrounding areas. Analyses of bronchoalveolar lavage samples (BAL) collected from people exposed to the paroxysmal 2001 Etna eruption revealed a strong enrichment of many toxic heavy metals. Comparing the BAL to the dust composition of southeastern Sicily, we found that only V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, and U enrichment could be related to the volcanic event, whereas Ni, Cu, Cd, and Pb contents come from the dissolution of particles of anthropogenic origin. Furthermore, the nature of these inhaled anthropogenic particles was revealed by anomalous La and…

TEPHRA010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences550 - Earth sciencesVolcanic EruptionsPM2.5010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesvolcanic eruptionBRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGEatmospheric particulatetrace element distributionDISSOLUTIONTRACEREnvironmental ChemistryHumansVOLCANIC ASHTephraDissolutionSicilyERUPTION0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographyInhalation Exposuregeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryAtmosphereTrace elementDustGeneral ChemistryAtmospheric dustParticulatesReference Standardsatmospheric particulate; trace element distribution; volcanic eruptionTrace ElementsSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologiarespiratory tract diseasesTrace elements lanthanides medical geochemistry bronchoalveolar lavagesVolcanoSolubility13. Climate actionEnvironmental chemistryBronchoalveolar Lavage FluidVolcanic ashEnvironmental MonitoringASH PARTICLES
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