PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Continuous handling of receipts linked to higher urine BPA levels

2014-02-25
(Press-News.org) Study participants who handled receipts printed on thermal paper continuously for 2 hours without gloves had an increase in urine bisphenol A (BPA) concentrations compared to when they wore gloves, according to a study in the February 26 issue of JAMA.

Human exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) has been associated with adverse health outcomes, including reproductive function in adults and neurodevelopment in children exposed shortly before or after birth. "Exposure to BPA is primarily through dietary ingestion, including consumption of canned foods. A less-studied source of exposure is thermal receipt paper, handled daily by many people at supermarkets, ATM machines, gas stations, and other settings," according to background information in the article. Thermal paper has a coating that is sensitive to heat, which is used in the process of printing on the paper, and has been shown to be transferred to skin with handling.

Shelley Ehrlich, M.D., Sc.D., M.P.H., of Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, and colleagues conducted a study to examine the effect of handling thermal receipts on urine BPA levels. The authors recruited 24 volunteers who provided urine samples before and after handling (with or without gloves) of receipts printed on thermal paper for a continuous two hours. BPA was detected in 83 percent (n = 20) of urine samples at the beginning of the study and in 100 percent of samples after handling receipts without gloves. The researchers observed an increase in urinary BPA concentrations after continuously handling receipts for 2 hours without gloves, but no significant increase when the participants used gloves.

The clinical implications of the height of the peak level and of chronic exposure are unknown, but may be particularly relevant to populations with occupational exposure such as cashiers, who handle receipts 40 or more hours per week, the authors write. "A larger study is needed to confirm our findings and evaluate the clinical implications."

INFORMATION:

(doi:10.1001/jama.2013.283735; Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com)

Editor's Note: This project was supported by a grant from the Harvard-NIOSH Education and Research Center. The authors have completed and submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest and none were reported.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Medical homes make small improvement in quality, do not cut costs, study finds

2014-02-25
A three-year pilot of a "medical home" model of primary care yielded few improvements in the quality of care and no reductions in hospitalizations, emergency department visits or total costs of care, according to a new RAND Corporation study. Evaluating one of the nation's earliest and largest multipayer medical home pilots, researchers found that most participating primary care practices achieved recognition as medical homes, but the quality of care improved significantly for only one of 11 widely-used quality measures. The findings are published in the Feb. 26 edition ...

Brain cell activity regulates Alzheimer’s protein

2014-02-25
Increased brain cell activity boosts brain fluid levels of a protein linked to Alzheimer's disease, according to new research from scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Tau protein is the main component of neurofibrillary tangles, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease. It has been linked to other neurodegenerative disorders, including frontotemporal dementia, supranuclear palsy and corticobasal degeneration. "Healthy brain cells normally release tau into the cerebrospinal fluid and the interstitial fluid that surrounds them, but ...

'How well did you sequence that genome?' NIST, consortium partners have answer

How well did you sequence that genome? NIST, consortium partners have answer
2014-02-25
In December 2013, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first high-throughput DNA sequencer (also known commonly as a "gene sequencer"), an instrument that allows laboratories to quickly and efficiently sequence a person's DNA for genetic testing, medical diagnoses and perhaps one day, customized drug therapies. Helping get the new device approved was another first: the initial use of a reference set of standard genotypes, or "coded blueprints" of a person's genetic traits. The standard genotypes were created by the National Institute of Standards and Technology ...

Talking in 3-D: Discussing and administrating complex construction models via a web browser

Talking in 3-D: Discussing and administrating complex construction models via a web browser
2014-02-25
Redevelopment of the London King's Cross station and the nearby neighborhood was announced in 2005 and completed with a grand opening in 2012. The internationally well-recognized engineering services firm Arup, famous among other things for their work on the Opera House in Sydney, Australia, and the Allianz Arena in Munich, worked on this 400 million pound construction project. In the process, the area to the north of the station including 50 new buildings, 2,000 new apartments, 20 new streets and ten new public squares was being renewed. Thus, a great challenge was to ...

Air Force aircraft returned from Vietnam is postwar source of Agent Orange contamination

2014-02-25
February 25, 2014 -- From 1971-1982, Air Force reservists, who flew in 34 dioxin-contaminated aircraft used to spray Agent Orange and returned to the U.S. following discontinuation of the herbicide spraying operations in the Vietnam War, were exposed to greater levels of dioxin than previously acknowledged, according to a study published today in Environmental Research by senior author Jeanne Mager Stellman, PhD, professor emerita at the Mailman School of Public Health's Department of Health Policy and Management. "These findings are important because they describe ...

New clues found to preventing lung transplant rejection

New clues found to preventing lung transplant rejection
2014-02-25
Organ transplant patients routinely receive drugs that stop their immune systems from attacking newly implanted hearts, livers, kidneys or lungs, which the body sees as foreign. But new research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis suggests that broadly dampening the immune response, long considered crucial to transplant success, may encourage lung transplant rejection. In a surprising discovery, the researchers found that newly transplanted lungs in mice were more likely to be rejected if key immune cells were missing, a situation that simulates ...

Ordinary conditioner removes head lice eggs as effectively as special products

Ordinary conditioner removes head lice eggs as effectively as special products
2014-02-25
Eggs from head lice, also called nits, are incredibly difficult to remove. Female lice lay eggs directly onto strands of hair, and they cement them in place with a glue-like substance, making them hard to get rid of. In fact, the eggs are glued down so strongly that they will stay in place even after hair has been treated with pediculicides -- substances used to kill lice. Some shampoos and conditioners that contain chemicals or special oils are marketed as nit-removal products. However, new research just published in the Journal of Medical Entomology shows that ordinary ...

Research links risky behaviors of gambling and sex

2014-02-25
February 25, 2014 -- Late adolescence is a period when many youth become involved in high-risk behaviors with adverse consequences. Researchers at the Mailman School of Public Health with colleagues at Johns Hopkins University studied the degree to which two such behaviors, adolescent sexual behaviors and gambling, affected African American youth in nine primary schools in Baltimore, MD. In data collected from a cohort study, they assessed whether certain adolescent sexual behaviors linked with unintended consequences such as adolescent pregnancy and sexually transmitted ...

Dartmouth-led research shows temperature, not snowfall, driving tropical glacier size

Dartmouth-led research shows temperature, not snowfall, driving tropical glacier size
2014-02-25
Temperature, not snowfall, has been driving the fluctuating size of Peru's Quelccaya Ice Cap, whose dramatic shrinkage in recent decades has made it a symbol for global climate change, a Dartmouth-led study shows. The findings support many scientists' suspicions that tropical glaciers are rapidly shrinking because of a warming climate, and will help scientists to better understand the natural variability of past and modern climate and to refine models that predict tropical glaciers' response to future climate change. The study appears in the journal Geology. A PDF ...

PFC exposure may spark metabolic changes in overweight children

2014-02-25
Washington, DC—Overweight children who were exposed to higher levels of perfluorinated chemicals tended to show early signs of developing the metabolic syndrome, according to a new study published in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. The term metabolic syndrome describes a cluster of risk factors that increase the chances of developing heart disease, stroke and diabetes. The study is the first to find changing metabolic markers in children were associated with exposure to perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs), common industrial chemicals ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SwRI receives $3 million NASA astrobiology grant to study microbial life in Alaska’s arctic sand dunes

Inequality destroys the benefits of positive economic growth for the poor

HSS presents innovative research aimed at faster recovery after knee surgery at AAOS Annual Meeting

Advancing catalysis: Novel porous thin-film approach developed at TIFR Hyderabad enhances reaction efficiency

Small, faint and 'unexpected in a lot of different ways': U-M astronomers make galactic discovery

Study finds that supportive workplace culture advances implementation of lifestyle medicine in health systems

USPSTF statement on screening for food insecurity

‘Fishial’ recognition: Neural network identifies coral reef sounds

Cardiovascular health and biomarkers of neurodegenerative disease in older adults

Ethics in patient preferences for AI–drafted responses to electronic messages

Patients’ affinity for AI messages drops if they know the technology was used

New ACS led study finds wildfires pose challenges to cancer care

Scientists discover new heavy-metal molecule ‘berkelocene’

Repeated esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal bleeding

Over 1 in 3 adults in households with guns do not store all in locked locations

How environmental exposures affect genes and increase cancer risk

Rising CO2 levels: Impacts on crop nutrition and global food supplies

Water movement on surfaces makes more electric charge than expected

People with COPD and arthritis have an increased risk of death

PNAS announces six 2024 Cozzarelli Prize recipients

AMS Science Preview: Data deserts, Federal science, malaria prediction

Microplastics could be fueling antibiotic resistance, Boston University study finds

Microplastics increase antimicrobial resistance

Endocrine Society elects Santoro as 2026-2027 President

Study explores effects of climatic changes on Christmas Island’s iconic red crabs

AI in engineering

Dr. Megan Abbott and the University of Colorado awarded $450,000 establishing a Clinical Research Center of Excellence that will also serve as a second site for SYNGAP1 ProMMiS

Empire Discovery Institute appoints Dr. Ronald Newbold as Chief Executive Officer

Douglas Hanahan, Ph.D., FAACR, honored with the 2025 Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Extraordinary Achievement in Cancer Research

Mapping DNA's hidden switches: A methylation atlas

[Press-News.org] Continuous handling of receipts linked to higher urine BPA levels