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

SwRI-led study explores risks of chemical exposure from household products

SwRI, EPA analyze 81 items made from a variety of materials

SwRI-led study explores risks of chemical exposure from household products
2024-12-04
(Press-News.org) SAN ANTONIO — December 4, 2024 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) collaborated with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to characterize the chemical makeup of 81 common household items. Researchers also evaluated the potential risk to users.

Exposure to chemicals can cause negative health effects, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Building on previous research to identify chemicals in consumer goods, SwRI and EPA also analyzed how samples of rubber, plastic, clothing, upholstery and fabric responded to environmental factors, such as a hot car or being worn.

The study, published in the Environmental Science & Technology journal, examines four years of data captured with advanced chromatography, suspect screening, non-targeted analysis and the SwRI-developed machine-learning method Highlight™. Instead of screening a sample against individual known compounds, this method allows scientists to identify, characterize and evaluate a large library of chemicals through suspect-screening analysis. The method identified 88,795 unique chemical features and 1,883 compound groups from 13 analytical batches.

“Highlight leverages machine learning algorithms for rapid pattern matching, which accelerated the workflow,” said William Watson, a research engineer in SwRI’s Intelligent Systems Division and the study’s lead author.

Another aim of the study was to advance the field of exposomics, which explores how a lifetime of chemical exposure from the environment, diet, lifestyle and other sources impacts human health. Characterizing chemicals in household items and common sources of exposure may help with future biomonitoring efforts.

“Consumer products don’t just consist of one chemical. Think of it as a mixed bag of related chemicals,” said Dr. Kristin Favela, a staff scientist in SwRI’s Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Division. “We wanted to determine if chemicals in the samples were ‘emittable’ or ‘extractable’ to understand the magnitude and likelihood of human chemical exposure.”

SwRI exposed samples of clothing, upholstery, fabrics, rubber and plastics to two different heat settings and solvent strengths. The researchers wanted to determine if the test samples would emit chemical vapors that might be inhaled in an indoor environment, like a hot car, or if worn. The study also explored whether chemicals could be extracted to better understand real-world exposure risks, such as when a child chews on a household item.

“Along with helping to advance our understanding of the risk chemical exposure poses to the public, this study also demonstrates our capability to use machine learning and Highlight findings to retrospectively analyze and understand older datasets,” said Watson.

Using EPA’s Toxicity Forecasting program, ToxCast, the team performed an additional analysis and interpretation to predict risk based on human exposure and available biological activity data. Among the 88 confirmed chemicals that were both extractable and emittable, 66 had available ToxCast data, and a majority of the ToxCast in vitro assay data (92%, an average of 441 assays per chemical) indicated no activity dependent on concentration.  No data was available for the other 22 chemicals. However at a higher concentration, synthetic antioxidant BKF, which can be used to stabilize plastics and rubbers, did show adverse effects when exposure reached 42.3 mg/kg/day. The research may help advance a screening model that can predict emission activity for household items.

The title of the paper is “Discerning Emittable from Extractable Chemicals Identified in Consumer Products by Non-Targeted GCxGC-TOFMS,” and it appears in Environmental Science & Technology journal and can be accessed at: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.4c07903.

For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/industry/chemical-analysis-services/floodlight-non-targeted-analysis-system.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
SwRI-led study explores risks of chemical exposure from household products

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

X-ray vision: Seeing through the mystery of an X-ray emissions mechanism

2024-12-04
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Since the 1960s, scientists who study X-rays, lightning and similar phenomena have observed something curious: In lab experiments replicating these occurrences, electrons accelerated between two electrodes can be of a higher energy than the voltage applied. According to Penn State researchers, this defies an assumption in physics that the energy of the electrons should correspond with the voltage applied. Despite the decades-long awareness of this apparent contradiction, researchers couldn’t ...

AI fact checks can increase belief in false headlines

AI fact checks can increase belief in false headlines
2024-12-04
Although many tech companies and start-ups have touted the potential of automated fact-checking services powered by artificial intelligence to stem the rising tide of online misinformation, a new study led by researchers at Indiana University has found that AI-fact checking can, in some cases, actually increase belief in false headlines whose veracity the AI was unsure about, as well as decrease belief in true headlines mislabeled as false. The work also found that participants given the option to view headlines fact checked by large language model-powered AI were significantly more likely to share both true and false news – but only ...

Poor health outcomes—including early deaths—linger for decades for those who lived in ‘redlined’ neighborhoods

2024-12-04
Redlining—a mid-20th-century federal government practice of denying home loans in African American and other minority neighborhoods—has long been associated with poor health outcomes, including disparate overall mortality rates among racial and ethnic groups. The term gets its name from the practice by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC, operational from 1933 to 1954) of color-coding maps based on each neighborhood’s level of mortgage creditworthiness, with A being the most creditworthy and D—noted with a red line—the least. Now, a new study led by a researcher with the Texas ...

Abnormal prenatal blood test results could indicate hidden maternal cancers

2024-12-04
WHAT: Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) found previously undetected cancers in 48.6% of pregnant people who had abnormal results for prenatal cell-free DNA (cfDNA) testing used to screen for chromosomal disorders in the fetus. Cancers included colorectal, breast, lung and pancreatic cancers, as well as lymphoma, cholangiocarcinoma and renal carcinoma. The screening test analyzes placental DNA fragments circulating in the maternal bloodstream to identify an extra chromosome or to determine ...

Study finds people on anti-obesity medications cut both weight and alcohol consumption

Study finds people on anti-obesity medications cut both weight and alcohol consumption
2024-12-04
DETROIT (Dec. 04, 2024)—Losing weight with anti-obesity medications (AOM) also resulted in decreased alcohol consumption for about half of the participants in a new study appearing in the current issue of JAMA Network Open. The research, led by Lisa Miller-Matero, PhD, an associate scientist and Associate Director of Health Services Research at Henry Ford Health, adds to a growing body of research that suggests medications such as Ozempic or Wegovy could be adapted to treat substance use disorders. “This was different ...

ETSU secures $900k defense grant

2024-12-04
The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded the ETSU Research Corporation over $900,000 as part of the Defense Industrial Base Consortium, an investment that will help create new opportunities to foster regional innovation in sustainable industrial manufacturing in the Appalachian region. “Our goal is to enhance the prosperity of our region by connecting local innovation with opportunities in global emerging markets,” said Eric Jorgenson, vice president of evelopment for the ETSU Research Corporation. “This project is another key part of the foundation of a robust biomanufacturing ecosystem in ...

ETSU researcher earns grant to build flood dashboard using generative AI

2024-12-04
An East Tennessee State University researcher is developing a cutting-edge dashboard using generative artificial intelligence to assist in monitoring flooding in Central Appalachia.  The pilot project, titled "Leveraging Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Automated Climate Resilience Dashboards: A Case Study on Flood Monitoring in Central Appalachia," has recently secured $20,000 in funding from the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) Lab.  Dr. Qian Huang from ETSU’s Center for Rural Health and Research, in collaboration with Dr. ...

AI-enabled analysis of images meant to catch one disease can reveal others

2024-12-04
With the help of an AI tool, computed tomography (CT) scans taken originally to look for tumors or bleeding or infections, also revealed calcium buildup in arteries, a sign of worsening cardiovascular disease.   This is the result of a new study led by researchers at NYU Langone Health and an example of a new trend in “opportunistic screening,” wherein radiologists repurpose existing medical images to diagnose illnesses beyond what the scan was originally designed to find. Presented at the annual Radiological Society of North America ...

Key objections to collecting immigration status data in national health surveys

Key objections to collecting immigration status data in national health surveys
2024-12-04
Nativity—characterized by place of birth, duration of residence in the host country, citizenship and immigration status—greatly influences the health of foreign-born individuals in the United States (U.S.). Despite this, many national health surveys omit questions about these dimensions of nativity, particularly immigration status. This omission limits the ability to assess health disparities across diverse immigrant subgroups and develop evidence-based policies and targeted interventions. To navigate this limitation, researchers rely on proxy measures or imputations ...

Clinical trial of device aims to induce ovulation in women with polycystic ovary syndrome

Clinical trial of device aims to induce ovulation in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
2024-12-04
Physicians at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences in Oklahoma City are leading a national clinical trial to help women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)-related infertility who want to become pregnant. The trial, called REBALANCE, studies the safety and effectiveness of an investigational device developed by May Health that is designed to restore ovulation disrupted by PCOS. OU Health reproductive endocrinologist Karl Hansen, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the OU College of Medicine, is leading the trial for ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Researchers develop polarization photodetector mimicking desert ant

Superconducting qubit baths give clean simulation of quantum transport

Astronomers witness the in situ spheroid formation in distant submillimetre-bright galaxies

Effects of bamboo invasion on forest structures and diameter–height allometries

Ultrasonication as a tool for directing cell growth and orientation

Lessons from Earth's hottest epoch in the last 65 million years: How global warming could shrink the tropics' rain belt

Independent rice paddy methane model validated for global applications: Study highlights emission mitigation potential

Infertility linked to onset of systemic autoimmune rheumatic disease after childbirth

Researchers use data from citizen scientists to uncover the mysteries of a blue low-latitude aurora

Possible colon cancer vaccine target uncovered in bacteria

Eating dark chocolate linked with reduced risk of type 2 diabetes

Eating dark but not milk chocolate linked to reduced risk of type 2 diabetes

End food and drink industry’s infiltration of UK children’s education, say experts

Concerns over potential harms of tests advertised directly to consumers

War in Lebanon has turned a decade of education crisis into a catastrophe - report

Spotted lanternflies in the US are living longer—and cities may be helping them spread

Slingshot spiders listen to fire off ballistic webs when they hear mosquitoes within range

SwRI-led study explores risks of chemical exposure from household products

X-ray vision: Seeing through the mystery of an X-ray emissions mechanism

AI fact checks can increase belief in false headlines

Poor health outcomes—including early deaths—linger for decades for those who lived in ‘redlined’ neighborhoods

Abnormal prenatal blood test results could indicate hidden maternal cancers

Study finds people on anti-obesity medications cut both weight and alcohol consumption

ETSU secures $900k defense grant

ETSU researcher earns grant to build flood dashboard using generative AI

AI-enabled analysis of images meant to catch one disease can reveal others

Key objections to collecting immigration status data in national health surveys

Clinical trial of device aims to induce ovulation in women with polycystic ovary syndrome

Natural ‘biopesticide’ against malaria mosquitoes successful in early field tests

NSF-Piedmont Triad Regenerative Medicine Engine (PTRME) awards $2.5 million in grants to drive economic growth

[Press-News.org] SwRI-led study explores risks of chemical exposure from household products
SwRI, EPA analyze 81 items made from a variety of materials