%0 Generic %D 2023 %T Environmental and Genetic Insights into Carcinogenesis: An Approach using Passive Sampling and CHIP Analysis in the Companion Dog %A Karlsson, EK %B 2023 Cancer Biology Program Research Retreat %8 10/2023 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2023 %T Investigating the Movement of Parent PAHs and Alkylated PAHs Between Air and Soil Before, During, and After a Wildfire to Understand Potential Human Exposure %A Kelly E O'Malley %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Brian W Smith %A Richard P Scott %A Kaley A Adams %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B ISES Chicago, IL %8 08/2023 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2023 %T Using Silicone Dogtags to Better Understand Personal Chemical Exposures of Structural Firefighters %A Emily M Bonner %E Carolyn M Poutasse %E Walker S Carlos Poston %E Sara A Jahnke %E Christopher K Haddock %E Lane G Tidwell %E Kim A Anderson %B ISES Chicago, IL %8 08/2023 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2022 %T Firefighter Dermal Exposure Assessment with Silicone Samplers %A Emily M Bonner %A Gavin P Horn %A Denise L Smith %A Steven Kerber %A Kenneth W Fent %A Richard P Scott %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B SOT San Diego %8 03/2022 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2022 %T Firefighter Dermal Exposure to PAHs Assessed with Silicone Samplers %A Emily M Bonner %A Gavin P Horn %A Denise L Smith %A Steven Kerber %A Kenneth W Fent %A Lane G Tidwell %A Richard P Scott %A Kaley A Adams %A Kim A Anderson %B 43rd SETAC North America %C Pittsburg, PA %8 11/2022 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2022 %T A Novel Framework to Form Sufficiently Similar Mixtures %A Briana N Rivera %A Christine C Ghetu %A Yvonne Chang %A Kim A Anderson %A Susan C Tilton %B Risk Assessment and Mixtures Specialty Section Webinar %8 01/22 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Assessing Chemical Movement and Temporality at a Former Creosote Site %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 42nd Annual Meeting Portland, OR %8 11/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Assessing PAH movement %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B FSES Data Update with Oregon DEQ, Cascadia, LLC and Port of Columbia, Virtual %8 01/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Current Approaches to Characterizing Chemical Mixtures %A Briana N Rivera %A Diana Rohlman %A Kim A Anderson %A Susan C Tilton %B Northwest Toxics Community Coalition %8 4/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Exploring Personal Chemical Exposures of Structural Firefighters Using Silicone Dog-tags as Passive Samplers %A Emily M Bonner %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Walker S Carlos Poston %A Sara A Jahnke %A Christopher K Haddock %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %X

Structural firefighters are exposed to many potentially hazardous chemicals while on the job. In a burning building, chemicals in furniture, building materials, and home goods can be volatilized in the high heat, and pyrogenic chemicals can be formed. Adverse health outcomes observed in firefighters, such as increased incidence of various cancers and cardiovascular disease, raise concerns about these occupational exposures. This study seeks to compare chemical exposures of firefighters when on- and off-duty using silicone dog-tags worn around the neck, as passive samplers. There were 57 firefighter participants selected from two-stations in the Kansas City Metropolitan area; on average, one received fewer than two calls per month (low call volume), and the other received more than 12 calls per month (high call volume). Each firefighter wore two separate dog-tags while on- and off-duty for a total of 30 24-hour shifts. The firefighters also filled out questionnaires, indicating the number of fire attacks they participated in while wearing the tags, as well as other demographic and lifestyle information that might inform exposures. The dog-tags were extracted and analyzed using GC-MS. This presentation will focus on results for two chemical classes, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and volatile organic chemicals (VOCs). Preliminary data show that 16 different firefighters were exposed to PCBs, 12 of which were from the high call volume station. Additionally, 12 different PCB congeners were detected. It is hypothesized that chemical concentrations in paired on-duty versus off-duty tags will be higher, and that the high versus low call volume station will have greater chemical concentrations. Other questions about concentration correlation to questionnaire data, PCB sources, and potential adverse health outcomes linked to the observed exposures will also be explored. Silicone passive samplers are a useful tool in gathering data on chemical exposures of firefighters because they can mimic dermal absorption of the bioavailable phase, a particularly concerning route of exposure for firefighters. They are also easy to use and maintain, allowing for this month-long exposure study. This application of passive sampling will help us better characterize the occupational exposures of firefighters when they are on- and off-duty, and how that is impacted by station call-volume.

%B SETAC North America 42nd Annual Meeting %8 11/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Role of Alkylated Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Mixture Toxicity from a Legacy Creosote Site %A Ian L Moran %A Tanguay RL %A Waters KM %A Anderson KA %B Environmental and Molecular Toxicology Departmental Seminar %8 04/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Wildfire impact on indoor/outdoor air quality and chemical movement of PAHs %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Brian W Smith %A Richard P Scott %A Kaley A Adams %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B Puget Sound Toxics Workshop, Virtual %8 02/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2021 %T Wildfire Impacts on Indoor and Outdoor Air Quality %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Brian W Smith %A Richard P Scott %A Kaley A Adams %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 42nd Annual Meeting Portland, OR %8 11/2021 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Assessing PAH chemical movement %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B FSES Data Update with Cascadia, LLC and Port of Columbia, Virtual %8 10/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T A Comparative Approach to Evaluating Bioactivity of Representative Mixtures %A Briana N Rivera %A Christine C Ghetu %A Kim A Anderson %A Susan C Tilton %B Protecting Our Water Future for Human and Environmental Health %8 01/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T A Comparative Approach to Evaluating Bioactivity of Representative Mixtures %A Briana N Rivera %A Christine C Ghetu %A Kim A Anderson %A Susan C Tilton %B Protecting Our Water Future for Human and Environmental Health %8 01/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T A Comprehensive Comparison of Indoor vs Outdoor Air Quality Across the United States %A Briana N Rivera %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Kaley A Adams %A Kim A Anderson %B Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry %8 11/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Discovery of Firefighter Chemical Exposures Using Military-Style Silicone Dog Tags %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Sara A Jahnke %A Walker S Carlos Poston %A Christopher K Haddock %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B 10th Annual OSU EMT Research Day, Corvallis, OR %8 1/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T A Novel Approach to Forming Sufficiently Similar Mixtures From Environmental Exposure Data %A Briana N Rivera %A Christine C Ghetu %A Kaley A Adams %A Kim A Anderson %A Susan C Tilton %B Pacific Northwest Association of Toxicologists Annual Meeting %8 11/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Predicting contaminant sources in environmental samples using GC-MS/MS alkylated PAH analysis and a comprehensive list of forensic ratios %A Christine C Ghetu %A Richard P Scott %A Glenn R Wilson %A Rachel Liu-May %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 41st Annual Meeting, Virtual. %8 11/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Time-Integrated Exposures to Identify Chemical Profiles between Health and Dysphagic Foals %A Briana N Rivera %E K. Mullen %Y Lane G Tidwell %? R. Ivanek %? D. Ainsworth %? Kim A Anderson %B Society of Toxicology %8 03/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Uncertain times call for uncertain measures: Challenges in modern dose response analysis %A Ian L Moran %B Oregon State University Superfund Research Program Colloquium %8 01/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Wildfire impact on indoor/outdoor air quality and chemical movement of PAHs %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Brian W Smith %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 41st Annual Meeting, Virtual %8 11/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2020 %T Wildfire impact on indoor/outdoor air quality and chemical movement of PAHs %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Brian W Smith %A Kim A Anderson %B Cascadia Wildfire and Urban Smoke Working Group Webinar, Virtual %8 07/2020 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Assessing wildfire influence on indoor and outdoor chemical concentrations and diffusive flux between soils and air of PAHs in the Western United States %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Kim A Anderson %B FSES External Advisory Committee Meeting, Yachats, OR %8 10/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Assessing wildfire influence on indoor and outdoor chemical concentrations and diffusive flux between soils and air of PAHs in the Western United States %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 40th Annual Meeting, Toronto, ON %8 11/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Assessing wildfire influence on indoor and outdoor chemical concentrations and diffusive flux between soils and air of PAHs in the Western United States %A Christine C Ghetu %A Diana Rohlman %A Kim A Anderson %B NIEHS Superfund Research Program 2019 Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA %8 11/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Discovery of Firefighter chemical Exposures Using Military-Style Silicone Dog Tags %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Walker S Carlos Poston %A Sara A Jahnke %A Christopher K Haddock %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B Military Health System Research Symposium, Kissimmee, FL %8 08/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Discovery of Firefighter Chemical Exposures using Military-Style Silicone Dog Tags %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Walker S Carlos Poston %A Sara A Jahnke %A Christopher K Haddock %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 40th Annual Meeting, Toronto, ON %8 11/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Environmental Pollution and Human Exposure in the Arctic %A Ian L Moran %B Oregon State University College of Science Ignite Colloquium %8 12/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T How Should We Approach Forming Representative Mixtures? %A Briana N Rivera %A Kim A Anderson %A Susan C Tilton %B Environmental Health Sciences Colloquim, Corvallis OR %8 09/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Non-Invasive Personal Wristband Sampler to Assess Chemical Exposures %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Diana Rohlman %A Kim A Anderson %B Advancing Environmental Health Science Research and Translation in India through Community-Based Participatory Research Workshop, Participatory Research in Asia, Delhi, India %8 02/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Silicone Pet Tags Associate Tris(1,3-Dichloro-2-Isopropyl) Phosphate Exposures with Feline Hyperthyroidism %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Julie Herbstman %A Mark E Peterson %A Jana Gordon %A Peter Soboroff %A Darrell Holmes %A Dezere Gonzalez %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B Oregon State University, Environmental Health Science Center July Colloquium, Corvallis, OR %8 07/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Silicone Pet Tags Associate Tris(1,3-Dichloro-2-Isopropyl) Phosphate Exposures with Feline Hyperthyroidism %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Julie Herbstman %A Mark E Peterson %A Jana Gordon %A Peter Soboroff %A Darrell Holmes %A Dezere Gonzalez %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 40th Annual Meeting, Toronto, ON %8 11/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2019 %T Using Passive Samplers to Evaluate Inhalation Exposure %A Briana N Rivera %A Kathleen Mullen %A Lane G Tidwell %A Renata Ivanek %A Dorothy Ainsworth %A Susan C Tilton %A Kim A Anderson %B Military Health System Research Symposium, Kissimmee, FL %8 08/2019 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Assessing flux of PAHs across sediment-water and water-air phases at a legacy creosote site in St. Helens, Oregon %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B 27th PNW-SETAC Annual Conference, Corvallis, OR %8 03/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Assessing flux of PAHs across sediment-water and water-air phases at a legacy creosote site in the Pacific Northwest, US %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 39th Annual Meeting, Sacremento, CA %8 11/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Assessing flux of PAHs across sediment-water and water-air phases at a legacy creosote site in the Pacific Northwest, US %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Peter D Hoffman %A Kim A Anderson %B FSES External Advisory Committee Meeting, Yachats, OR %8 10/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Assessing flux of PAHs across sediment-water and water-air phases at a legacy creosote site in the Pacific Northwest, US %A Christine C Ghetu %A D James Minick %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B 9th Annual Research Day, Department of Environmental and Molecular Toxicology, Corvallis, OR %8 01/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Bridging Superfund Bioavailable PAH Fate with Individual Exposures and Biological Effects %A Christine C Ghetu %A Kim A Anderson %X
%B Oregon State University/PNNL Superfund Research Program External Advisory Meeting, Carson, WA %8 03/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Discovery of common chemical exposures across three continents using silicone wristbands %A Holly Dixon %A Armstrong, Georgina %A Michael L Barton %A Bergmann AJ %A Melissa Bondy %A Mary L Halbleib %A Erin N Haynes %A Julie Herbstman %A Winnifred Hamilton %A Peter D Hoffman %A Paul C Jepson %A Molly Kile %A Laurel D Kincl %A Paul J Laurienti %A Paula E North %A LB Paulik %A Petrosino, Joe %A Points, Gary L %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Diana Rohlman %A Richard P Scott %A Brian W Smith %A Lane G Tidwell %A Cheryl Walker %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %B FSES External Advisory Committee Meeting, Yachats, OR %8 10/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Feline Hyperthyroidism and Household Chemical Exposures %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Kim A Anderson %B 9th Annual Research Day, Department of Environmental and Molecular Toxicology, Corvallis, OR %8 01/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T A Novel Approach for Measuring Firefighter Occupational Chemical Exposures %A Lane G Tidwell %E Carolyn M Poutasse %E Walker S Carlos Poston %E Christopher K Haddock %E Sara A Jahnke %E Kim A Anderson %B FEMA, Assistance to Firefighters Meeting, Houston, TX %8 08/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Rapid deployment of passive sampling wristbands in response to Hurricane Harvey; Community engagement and reporting. %A Peter D Hoffman %A Holly Dixon %A Diana Rohlman %A Lane G Tidwell %A Michael L Barton %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC %8 11/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Research and reporting back: Community-engaged investigation around asthma and air pollution %A Diana Rohlman %A Laurel D Kincl %A Holly Dixon %A Evoy, Richie %A Michael L Barton %A Kim A Anderson %B Seminar at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health and NIEHS Center, New York City, NY %8 10/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Silicone wristbands to assess personal chemical exposure %A Holly Dixon %A Kim A Anderson %B Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai: New York City Exposome Symposium, New York City, NY %8 11/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Silicone wristbands to assess personal chemical exposure %A Holly Dixon %A Kim A Anderson %B Seminar at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health and NIEHS Center, New York City, NY %8 11/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2018 %T Wearable Silicone Passive Sampling Devices Explore Flame Retardant Exposures in Hyperthyroid Housecat Case-Control Study %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Julie Herbstman %A Mark E Peterson %A Jana Gordon %A Peter Soboroff %A Darrell Holmes %A Dezere Gonzalez %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B Joint Meeting of the International Society of Exposure Science and International Society of Environmental Epidemiology, Ottawa, ON %8 08/2018 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2017 %T Comparing chemical exposures across diverse communities using silicone wristbands %A Holly Dixon %A Carey E Donald %A Alan J Bergmann %A Points, Gary L %A Richard P Scott %A Brian W Smith %A Kim A Anderson %B 27th International Society of Exposure Science Annual Meeting. Research Triangle Park, North Carolina. %8 10/2017 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2017 %T Diffusive flux of PAHs across sediment-water and water-air interfaces at urban Superfund sites and economic Implications %A D James Minick %A Kim A Anderson %B American Chemical Socieity National Meeting %8 08/2017 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2017 %T Hazard assessment of a PAH Superfund mixture in the zebrafish developmental toxicity mode %A D James Minick %A Mitra Geier %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %X
%B Pacific Northwest Chapter of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 26th Annual Meeting %8 04/2017 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2017 %T Leveraging passive sampling and unique equine population exposures to assess negative post-natal health outcomes %A Lane G Tidwell %E Carey E Donald %E Kathleen Mullen %E Kim A Anderson %X

In 2012 a high prevalence of neonatal foals born with neurological deficits (altered mentation and dysphagia) was observed at a farm located in Pennsylvania (PA) near a number of unconventional natural gas drilling (UNGD) sites.  The farm proprietor also owned another horse farm in New York (NY) that was not situated near UNGD sites. Newborn foals and mares on the NY farm did not exhibit similar health issues. Over the last 5 years the frequency of dysphagia in foals at the PA facility has increased from 25 to 92%.  From 2014 to 2016 passive sampling devices (PSDs) were deployed on brood mares at both farms continually, and PSDs were changed out every six weeks. PSDs were also deployed in the ambient air and in well water at each farm. . 

%B International Society of Exposure Science %8 10/2017 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2017 %T A passive sampling model to predict PAH levels in butter clams, a traditional food source for Native American tribes of the Salish Sea Region %A D James Minick %A Kim A Anderson %B Superfund Program National Meeting %8 12/2017 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2017 %T Youth Para-Occupational Exposures to Pesticide Mixtures %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Paul J Laurienti %A Kim A Anderson %B Food Safety and Environmental Stewardship (FSES) External Advisory Council (EAC), Corvallis, OR %8 06/2017 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Adapting passive samplers to investigate PAH and PCB flux from soil to air %A Carey E Donald %A Kim A Anderson %B Society for Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 2016 Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida, USA %8 11/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Assessing PAH exposures with multiple approaches including silicone wristbands %A Holly Dixon %A Richard P Scott %A Darrell Holmes %A Lehyla Calero %A Laurel D Kincl %A Katrina M Waters %A David Camann %A Antonia M Calafat %A Julie Herbstman %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society of Exposure Science 26th Annual Meeting, Utrecht, Netherlands %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Diffusive flux of PAHs across sediment, water, and air interfaces at urban Superfund Sites %A D James Minick %E Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 37th Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida %8 11/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Distribution of chemical exposures in rural Peru using silicone wristbands %A Alan J Bergmann %A Paula E North %A Vasquez, Luis %A Bello, Hernan %A Maria del Carmen Ruiz %A Kim A Anderson %B Environmental Health Sciences and Superfund Research Program Colloquium %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Empowering People: Personal Wristband Passive Sampling Nexus %A Kim A Anderson %B 2016 Environmental Health Summit: Community Engaged Research and Citizen Science %8 12/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Making invisible pollution visible: A demo of Blair’s OMSI demo %A LB Paulik %B Oregon State University Superfund Research Program Environmental Health Science Trainee Colloquium. Corvallis, Oregon, United States %8 06/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Movement of PAHs emitted from natural gas extraction wells %A LB Paulik %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Diana Rohlman %A Smith BW %A Richard P Scott %A Laurel D Kincl %A Haynes EN %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society of Exposure Science 26th Annual Meeting, Utrecht, The Netherlands %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Passive wristband samplers assess individual PAH exposure near natural gas extraction %A LB Paulik %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Diana Rohlman %A Smith BW %A Laurel D Kincl %A Haynes EN %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society of Exposure Science 26th Annual Meeting, Utrecht, The Netherlands %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Personal exposure to PAHs near natural gas extraction %A LB Paulik %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Diana Rohlman %A Smith BW %A Richard P Scott %A Laurel D Kincl %A Haynes EN %A Kim A Anderson %B Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry North America 37th Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida, United States %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Personal passive sampling in Peru: Distribution and sources of diverse chemicals measured with silicone wristbands %A Alan J Bergmann %A Paula E North %A Vasquez, Luis %A Bello, Hernan %A Maria del Carmen Ruiz %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society of Exposure Science %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Predicting PAH contamination in resident shellfish %A LB Paulik %A Smith BW %A Bergmann AJ %A Gregory J Sower %A Norman D Forsberg %A Teeguarden JG %A Kim A Anderson %B Oregon State University Superfund Research Program External Advisory Council Meeting. Corvallis, Oregon %8 6/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Silicone wristbands detect individuals' pesticide exposures in West Africa %A Carey E Donald %A Richard P Scott %A Kathy L Blaustein %A Mary L Halbleib %A Sarr, Makhfousse %A Paul C Jepson %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society for Exposure Science Annual Meeting, Utrecht, the Netherlands %8 10/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2016 %T Toxicity in zebrafish of complex polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon mixtures exposed to terrestrially-appropriate UV-radiation. %A Peter D Hoffman %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kim A Anderson %B Society for Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 2016 Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida, USA %8 11/2016 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Assessment of PAH Contribution to Superfund Site Hazard Using a Representative PAH Mixture and a Zebrafish Developmental Toxicity Model %A D James Minick %A Mitra Geier %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 36th Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City, Utah %8 11/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Before and After Chemical Threats, Emerging Chemicals and Passive Sampling Technology %A Kim A Anderson %B AAAS Citizen Science Conference (inaugural). San Jose, CA %8 02/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Can passive sediment samplers predict clam contamination? %A LB Paulik %A Jamie Donatuto %A Christine Woodward %A Molly Kile %A Harding, A %A Kim A Anderson %B OSU Superfund Research Program Tribal-University Collaborations' Community Engagement Core Advisory Committee Meeting, Portland, OR %8 04/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Chemistry and chemical properties of crude oils and fuel products; chemical fate following a spill; sampling methods during an incident; examples from the BP Deepwater Horizon incident %A Kim A Anderson %B Crude by Rail Workshop. Portland, OR %8 06/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Contribution of PAHs to the teratogenicity of bioavailable Superfund mixtures %A Alan J Bergmann %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 36th Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City, Utah %8 11/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Contribution of PAHs to the teratogenicity of bioavailable superfund mixtures %A Alan J Bergmann %E Robyn L Tanguay %E Kim A Anderson %B Oregon State University Superfund Research Program's Environmental Health Science Trainee Colloquium %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Contribution of PAHs to the teratogenicity of bioavailable superfund mixtures %A Alan J Bergmann %E Robyn L Tanguay %E Kim A Anderson %B FSES External Advisory Committee Meeting %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Disasters and Emerging Environmental Threats %A Miller, A %A Kim A Anderson %A Erin N Haynes %A Lefthand-Begay, C %A O’Fallon, L %A Kwok, R %B 25th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Exposure Science. Henderson, Nevada %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Engaging Rural Citizens to Answer Questions about Air Quality %A Diana Rohlman %A Erin N Haynes %A Kim A Anderson %A Laurel D Kincl %A Elam, S. %A LB Paulik %B Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting. Pittsburgh, PA %8 03/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Environmental Preparedness and Resilience Empowering People: Personal Wristband Sampling Nexus %A Kim A Anderson %A Laurel D Kincl %A Diana Rohlman %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Josh A Willmarth %A Michael L Barton %B 25th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Exposure Science. Henderson, Nevada %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Exploring the Environmental Controls on the Degradation of Oil by Marine Fungi %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Simister, R L %A White, H K %B 249th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, Denver, CO %8 03/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Mobile Device for Measuring Ambient Chemical Exposure, Location and Respiratory Health Robustness and Comparisons with Conventional Technologies %A Kim A Anderson %A Holly Dixon %A Diana Rohlman %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Scaffidi, Chris %A Katrina M Waters %A Julie Herbstman %A Laurel D Kincl %B 25th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Exposure Science. Henderson, Nevada %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T PAHs standards, analytical methods and PAHs in air, water, and resident organisms %A Kim A Anderson %B Air Toxics Science Advisory Committee. Portland, OR %8 05/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Passive sampling in ambient and individuals' environments in rural Peru %A Alan J Bergmann %A Vasquez, Luis %A Paula E North %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 36th Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City, Utah %8 11/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Passive sampling in ambient and individuals' environments in rural Peru %A Alan J Bergmann %E Vasquez, Luis %E Paula E North %E Kim A Anderson %B FSES External Advisory Committee Meeting %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Passive water sampling predicts PAH contamination in signal crayfish, Pacifastacus leniusculus %A LB Paulik %A Brian W Smith %A Alan J Bergmann %A Gregory J Sower %A Norman D Forsberg %A JG Teeguarden %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 36th Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City, Utah %8 11/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Predicting PAH Contamination in Resident Shellfish %A LB Paulik %A Brian W Smith %A Alan J Bergmann %A Gregory J Sower %A Norman D Forsberg %A JG Teeguarden %A Kim A Anderson %B Oregon State University Superfund Research Program’s Environmental Health Science Trainee Colloquium. Corvallis, OR %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Sampler technology assessing chemical exposures examples prior during and after environmental disasters %A Kim A Anderson %B Living on the Edge Conference 2015 - Managing Change through Innovation. Galveston, Texas %8 10/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Silicone wristbands to monitor personal occupational exposure to chemicals %A Kim A Anderson %B NIEHS sponsored Worker Training Program Awardee Meeting and Workshop, by invitation. Portland, OR %8 02/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2015 %T Transforming Epidemiological Studies: Using Passive Wristband Samplers to Measure Environmental Contaminant Exposure %A Holly Dixon %A Laurel D Kincl %A David Camann %A Julie Herbstman %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 36th Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City, Utah %8 11/2015 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T A Community-Based Approach to Environmental Health: Developing Novel Technologies to Evaluate Air Quality and Respiratory Health %A Diana Rohlman %A Kim A Anderson %A Arkin, L %A Laurel D Kincl %B Oregon Public Health Association Conference. Corvallis, OR %8 10/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Community-based EHSC Pilot Projects: Utilizing interdisciplinary approaches and community involvement to address environmental health concerns %A Diana Rohlman %A Laurel D Kincl %A Molly Kile %A Kim A Anderson %B Environmental and Molecular Toxicology Research Day. Corvallis, OR %8 01/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Component-based analysis of OPAH interaction effects in zebrafish %A Carey E Donald %A Sarah E Allan %A Steven G O'Connell %A Brian W Smith %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 35th Annual Meeting %8 11/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Detecting, Assessing, and Improving Understanding of Environmental Health Risks though Citizen Scientists and Passive Sampling Technologies %A Kim A Anderson %B National Academy of Sciences sponsored, Community Resilience and Health Opportunity Analysis Workshop. New Orleans, LA %8 09/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Evolution of a robust tribal-university research partnership to investigate tribal exposures and build scientific capacity %A Diana Rohlman %A Harper, Barbara %A Harding, Anna %A Stuart Harris %A Molly Kile %A Kim A Anderson %A Staci M Simonich %B Oral presentation at the Contemporary Northwest Tribal Health Conference, Portland, OR %8 03/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Evolution of a robust tribal-university research partnership to investigate tribal exposures and build scientific capacity %A Diana Rohlman %A Harper, Barbara %A Harding, Anna %A Stuart Harris %A Molly Kile %A Kim A Anderson %A Staci M Simonich %B Oral presentation at the 6th Annual Northwest Environmental Health Conference, Portland, OR %8 04/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Exposure Assessment Monitoring Tools Panel: Passive Wristband Samplers %A Diana Rohlman %A Laurel D Kincl %A Kim A Anderson %B EHS Center Meeting. Los Angeles, CA %8 04/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Invited speaker %A Kim A Anderson %B NIEHS sponsored Exposure Science in 21st Century Citizen Science Workshop. North Carolina %8 11/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Passive samplers used in aquatic environments %A Kim A Anderson %B US EPA sponsored State Risk Assessors (represents 48 states) %8 10/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Polyethylene Sampling Rates of Persistent Organic Pollutants %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Sun, C %A Lohmann, R %B University of Rhode Island, Graduate School of Oceanography, Narragansett, RI %8 08/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Polyethylene Sampling Rates of Persistent Organic Pollutants %A Carolyn M Poutasse %A Sun, C %A Lohmann, R %B Haverford College, Undergraduate Research Symposium, Haverford, PA %8 09/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Teratogenicity of PAHs from Portland Harbor? Effects-directed analysis with passive sampling and developing zebrafish %A Alan J Bergmann %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B OSU SRP Trainee Colloquium %8 10/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Using silicone as biomonitors of exposure and potential body burden sinks for lipophilic toxicants. %A Steven G O'Connell %A Jamie Pennington %A Diana Rohlman %A Nancy I Kerkvliet %A Susan Carozza %A Kim A Anderson %K Humans %K implant %K Mice %K silicone %B 35th Annual Meeting of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. Vancouver, BC Canada %8 11/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T Using silicone wristbands as personal monitoring devices. %A Steven G O'Connell %A Kim A Anderson %B Northwest Occupational Health Conference Annual Conference, Richland, WA %8 10/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2014 %T What's in the air? Using passive sampling to answer questions about fracking %A LB Paulik %B Oregon State University Superfund Research Program Trainee Colloquium, Corvallis, OR %8 10/2014 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Air – Water Exchange of PAH during the DWH Incident %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Glenn R Wilson %A Steven G O'Connell %A Sarah E Allan %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society of Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds, Corvallis Oregon %8 09/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Exchange of PAHs and OPAHs Accross the Air-Water Boundry during the DWH Oil Spill %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Glenn R Wilson %A Steven G O'Connell %A Sarah E Allan %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 34th Annual Conference, Nashville, TN, USA. %8 11/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Fractionation of passive sampling device extracts explores contribution of PAHs to zebrafish toxicity %A Alan J Bergmann %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B International Society of Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds %8 09/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Integrating passive sampling with UV irradiation and bioassays: an approach for modeling PAH degradation and phototoxicity in bioavailable mixtures %A Elie, Marc R %A Norman D Forsberg %A Sarah E Allan %A Steven G O'Connell %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B 34th Annual SETAC Meeting %8 2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Novel Technologies for OPAH and PAH Identification in Personal and Environmental Complex Mixtures %A Steven G O'Connell %A Glenn R Wilson %A Lane G Tidwell %A Sarah E Allan %A LB Paulik %A Kim A Anderson %B 11th International Conference on Environmental Mutagens, Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil %8 11/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Passive Sampling and Online Systems Offer Citizen Scientists the Ability to Monitor Their Exposure in the Event of a Disaster %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Elena S Peterson %A Michael L Barton %A Josh A Willmarth %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 34th Annual Conference, Nashville, TN, USA %8 11/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Passive Sampling Capacity Building with the K.C. Donnelly Externship %A Steven G O'Connell %A Lane G Tidwell %A Glenn R Wilson %A Kim A Anderson %B 26th Superfund Research Program Annual Meeting, Baton Rouge LA %8 10/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Passive sampling coupled to UVB irradiation: a useful analytical approach for modeling toxic oxygenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon formation in bioavailable mixtures %A Elie, Marc R %A Norman D Forsberg %A Sarah E Allan %A Steven G O'Connell %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %B 246th ACS National Meeting %8 2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Passive Sampling Devices and Shellfish %A LB Paulik %B OSU SRP Tribal-University Collaborations' Community Engagement Core Advisory Committee Meeting, Pendleton, OR %8 11/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2013 %T Using PSDs to Assess Bioavailable PAHs in Traditionally Smoked Fish %A Lane G Tidwell %A Stuart Harris %A Kim A Anderson %B Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Executive Advisory Council, Pendleton,OR,USA %8 11/2013 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Assessment and source-modeling of bioavailable contaminants in Gulf of Mexico coastal waters before, during and after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill %A Kim A Anderson %A Sarah E Allan %A Steven G O'Connell %A Lane G Tidwell %B 243rd ACS National Meeting %8 03/2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Bridging Environmental Mixtures and Toxic Effects %A Sarah E Allan %A Brian W Smith %A Robyn L Tanguay %A Kim A Anderson %X

BRIDGES is a bioanalytical tool that combines passive sampling with the embryonic zebrafish developmental toxicity bioassay to provide a quantitative measure of the toxicity of bioavailable complex mixtures. Passive sampling devices (PSDs), which sequester and concentrate bioavailable organic contaminants from the environment, were deployed in the Willamette and Columbia Rivers within and outside of the Portland Harbor Superfund site in Portland, Oregon. Six sampling events were conducted in the summer and fall of 2009 and 2010. PSD extracts were analyzed for PAH compounds and screened for 1,200 chemicals of concern using deconvolution reporting software. The developmental toxicity of the extracts was analyzed using the embryonic zebrafish bioassay. Significant spatial and temporal differences in the concentration of contaminants at the sites were observed. Similarly, significant differences in the developmental toxicity of the samples were recorded. This demonstrates the importance of utilizing an environmental monitoring tool, such as BRIDGES, that can provide site-specific, temporally resolved information about environmental contaminants and directly link environmental samples to toxicity. Multivariate modeling approaches were applied to paired chemical-toxic effects data sets to help unravel chemistry-toxicity associations. Although this research highlights the complexity of discerning specific bioactive compounds in complex mixtures, it demonstrates methods for associating toxic effects with chemical characteristics of environmental samples.

%B SETAC North America 33rd Annual Meeting %8 11/2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Effect of Native American fish smoking methods on dietary exposure to PAHs and possible risks to human health %A Norman D Forsberg %A Stone, Dave %A Harding, Anna %A Harper, Barbara %A Stuart Harris %A Matzke, Melissa M %A Cardena, Andres %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %B CTUIR Tribal-University Collaboration to Address Tribal Exposures to PAHs and Improve Community Health, Pendleton, OR %8 2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Engagement of Native American Tribes in the characterization of novel PAH dietary exposure pathways, assessment of possible human health risks %A Norman D Forsberg %A Stone, Dave %A Harding, Anna %A Harper, Barbara %A Stuart Harris %A Matzke, Melissa M %A Cardenas, Andres %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %X

Although it is known that legacy toxicants, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), can be introduced into meats via smoke curing, little is known about their prevalence in smoked salmon prepared using traditional Native American smoking techniques. This work sought to characterize the effect of traditional Native American fish smoking methods on dietary exposure to 33 legacy and emerging substituted PAHs and identify possible risks to human health. Salmon smoking events were carried out by Tribal researchers at the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation in collaboration with Oregon State University Superfund Research Program researchers. Fresh caught Chinook salmon were smoked using two commonly used smoking structures (tipi or shed) and two types of traditionally used woods (apple or alder). For the purposes of exposure pathway and risk assessment, all salmon samples were prepared as if to be eaten. Additionally, 20 non-smoked spring-run Chinook salmon were analyzed for background PAH content along with three commercially available smoked salmon. Salmon samples were subsequently analyzed for PAHs. Potential carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic risks to human health were evaluated using Relative Potency Factor and Hazard Index approaches. 

Across all smoking methods, individual PAH loads ranged between < 2 – 3,800 μg/kg, where non-carcinogenic, carcinogenic, emerging, and legacy PAHs generally accounted for 95%, 5%, 20% and 80% of the total PAH load respectively. It was found that neither smoking structure nor wood type accounted for differences in smoked salmon PAH content. However, carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic PAH loads in traditionally smoked salmon were 40 – 430 times higher than PAH loads measured in fresh caught non-smoked salmon and commercial smoked salmon. Exposure to the levels of carcinogenic PAHs measured in traditionally prepared smoked salmon could result in excess life-time cancer risks between 1E-5 and 1E-4 at a daily consumption rate of 5 g/d and could approach 1E-2 at 300 g/d. Exposure to non-carcinogenic PAHs could result in hazard indexes of 0.005 at 5 g/d and approach 0.3 at 300 g/d. Levels of PAHs present in smoked salmon prepared using traditional Native American methods potentially pose elevated cancer risks if consumed at high consumption rates over many years. Study results were shared with the Tribes and are currently being evaluated in order to design a culturally specific Tribal message.

%B SETAC North America 33rd Annual Conference %8 11/2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Engagement of Native American Tribes in the determination of legacy and emerging PAH dietary exposure scenarios, assessment of possible risks to human health %A Norman D Forsberg %A Harding, Anna %A Harper, Barbara %A Stone, Dave %A Cardenas, Andres %A Stuart Harris %A Matzke, Melissa M %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %X

Although it is known that legacy toxicants, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), can be introduced into meats via smoke curing, little is known about their prevalence in smoked salmon prepared using traditional Native American smoking techniques. This work sought to characterize the effect of traditional Native American fish smoking methods on dietary exposure to 33 legacy and emerging PAHs and identify possible risks to human health. Salmon smoking events were carried out by Tribal researchers at the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) in collaboration with Oregon State University Superfund Research Program (OSU SRP) researchers. Fresh caught spring-run Chinook salmon were smoked using two commonly used smoking structures (tipi or shed) and two types of traditionally used woods (apple or alder). For the purposes of exposure and risk assessment, all salmon samples were prepared as if to be eaten. Additionally, 20 non-smoked spring-run Chinook salmon were analyzed for background PAH content along with three commercially available smoked salmon. Salmon samples were subsequently analyzed for PAH content using a novel analytical approach developed and validated specifically for application in this study.

Across all smoking methods, individual PAH loads ranged between < 2 – 3,800 μg/kg, where non-carcinogenic, carcinogenic, emerging, and legacy PAHs generally accounted for 95%, 5%, 20% and 80% of the total PAH load respectively. It was found that neither smoking structure nor wood type accounted for differences in smoked salmon content of 33 PAHs. However, carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic PAH loads in traditionally smoked salmon were 40 – 430 times higher than PAH loads measured in fresh caught non-smoked salmon and commercial smoked salmon. Exposure to the levels of carcinogenic PAHs measured in traditionally prepared smoked salmon could result in excess life-time cancer risks between 1E-5 and 1E-4 at a daily consumption rate of 5 g/d and could approach 1E-2 at 300 g/d. Exposure to non-carcinogenic PAHs could result in hazard indexes of 0.005 at 5 g/d and approach 0.3 at 300 g/d. Levels of PAHs present in smoked salmon prepared using traditional Native American methods potentially pose elevated cancer risks if consumed at high consumption rates over many years.

During the course of this study, the OSU SRP Community Engagement Core partnered with CTUIR to develop and publish a unique Material and Data sharing agreement. In accordance with the agreement, study findings were formally presented to CTUIR members and researchers on two separate occasions; once in Portland, Oregon at the Food Innovation Center and again in Pendleton, OR to the CTUIR advisory committee. Engagement of the CTUIR led to rich discussions which ultimately resulted in the development and submission of a joint publication for peer review with the American Chemical Society. Study results are currently being evaluated in order to design a culturally specific message for the Tribes.

%B Connecting Research and Practice: A Dialogue Between ATSDR and the NIEHS Superfund Research Program %8 2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Informing communities – a collaborative investigation of Native American PAH dietary exposure scenarios and possible risks to human health %A Norman D Forsberg %A Harding, Anna %A Stone, Dave %A Harper, Barbara %A Stuart Harris %A Matzke, Melissa M %A Cardenas, Andres %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %X

This work sought to characterize the effect of traditional Native American fish smoking methods on dietary exposure to PAHs and identify possible risks to human health. To this end, fresh spring-run Chinook salmon were purchased from Tribal fisherman and smoked using two commonly used smoking structures (tipi or shed) and two types of traditionally used woods (apple or alder). Salmon smoking events were carried out by Tribal researchers at the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) in collaboration with Oregon State University Superfund Research Program (OSU SRP) researchers. For the purposes of exposure and risk assessment, all salmon samples were prepared as if to be eaten. Additionally, 20 non-smoked spring-run Chinook salmon were analyzed for background PAH content along with three commercially available smoked salmon.

Across all smoking methods, individual PAH loads ranged between < 2 – 3,800 μg/kg, where non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic PAHs accounted for 90% and 10% of the total PAH load respectively. It was found that neither smoking structure nor wood type accounted for differences in smoked salmon PAH content. However, PAH loads in traditionally smoked salmon were 40 – 430 times higher than PAH loads measured in fresh caught non-smoked salmon and commercial smoked salmon. Exposure to levels of carcinogenic PAHs measured in traditionally prepared smoked salmon could result in excess lifetime cancer risks between 1E-5 and 1E-4 at a daily consumption rate of 5 g/d and could approach 1E-2 at 300 g/d. Exposure to non-carcinogenic PAHs could result in hazard indexes of 0.005 at 5 g/d and approach 0.3 at 300 g/d. PAH levels present in smoked salmon prepared using traditional Native American methods potentially pose elevated cancer risks if consumed at high consumption rates over many years.

Study results are currently being evaluated in order to design a culturally specific message for the Tribes.

%B The 25th Annual Meeting of the Superfund Research Program %8 2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Pilot Study Using LFT to Assess Bioavailable PAHs During Tradtional Fish Smoking %A Lane G Tidwell %A Norman D Forsberg %A Kim A Anderson %B CTUIR Tribal-University Collaboration to Address Tribal Exposures to PAHs and Improve Community Health, Pendleton, OR %8 04/2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2012 %T Utilizing Passive Sampling for Rapid Response to Assess Atmospheric Exposure to PAHs Before, During and After the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Glenn R Wilson %A Steven G O'Connell %A Sarah E Allan %A Kim A Anderson %X

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are present in crude oil and may persist in the environment even after visible evidence is gone. Volatilization of crude oil can be one route of exposure for PAHs.  Exposures of PAHs from crude oil spills typically occurs concurrent with the spill or prior to significant weathering of the oil. Acute chemical spills generally initiate a rapid clean up response; however, there is often a significant exposure period prior to elaborate air monitoring equipment setup.  Because PSDs do not require elaborate equipment or electricity, we were able to sample within days of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. We deployed passive sampling devices (PSDs) for air sampling prior to, during and after shoreline oiling. Study locations included sites in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. PSDs mimic the chemical uptake of biomembranes by exploiting the fugacities of vapor phase compounds in the atmosphere. Chemical data from PSD extracts can be employed to assess potential exposure, transport, fate and sourcing of emerging and legacy contaminants in the atmosphere. 

Forty two samples were collected over a 15 month period beginning in May 2010; passive sampling devices were used to monitor the bioavailable concentration of PAHs in air. Prior to shoreline oiling, baseline data was obtained at all the study sites, allowing for direct before and after comparisons of PAH air contamination due to oiling. Samples were analyzed using a method composed of 33 emerging and legacy PAHs. As many as 18 PAHs were quantified in some air PSD extracts. Flouranthene, pyrene and phenanthrene were the largest contributors to the total vapor phase PAH concentration at our sampling sites. PSDs were also screened for an additional 1,200 contaminants of concern. Analysis of PSDs with this screening method resulted in positive identification of oxygen, sulfanate and nitrogen substituted PAHs, pesticides, and compounds used in industry such as musks and flame retardants. Our study demonstrates the utility of air PSDs to respond to acute chemical spills and collect chemical data sets on a wide range of contaminants in a more rapid fashion than traditional air monitoring technologies. During this study OSU’s Superfund Research Program Research Translation and Community Engagement Cores developed resources including workshops, brochures, and web-based information available to the communities impacted by the spill.

%B SETAC North America %8 11/2012 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Assessment of PAHs in Traditionally Prepared Native American Smoked Salmon %A Norman D Forsberg %A Stone, Dave %A Harding, Anna %A Harper, Barbara %A Stuart Harris %A Matzke, Melissa M %A Cardena, Andres %A Katrina M Waters %A Kim A Anderson %B Superfund Research Program-Tribal Collaboration Meeting, Portland, OR %8 11/2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Biological Response Indicator Devices for Gauging Environmental Stressors (BRIDGES) in the Gulf of Mexico %A Kim A Anderson %B Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) and the Ad Hoc Group for Medical Research, Advancing Discovery: Assessing the Impact of the Gulf Oil Spill %8 2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T A case study in tribal-university collaboration: Air sampling on the Swinomish Reservation %A Kim A Anderson %B Invited Workshop Instructor, National Association of Remedial Project Managers, EPA/NIEHS %8 2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Innovative Technologies to Quantify Environmental Contaminant Bioavailability & Exposure %A Kim A Anderson %B Invited Workshop Instructor, National Association of Remedial Project Managers, EPA/NIEHS “Passive Sampling Devices Technology” %8 2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Innovative Technologies to Quantify Environmental Contaminant Bioavailability & Exposure %A Kim A Anderson %B Invited Seminar Speaker, Special Seminar & Networking Opportunities, Sponsored by the Superfund Research Program, NIEHS In Partnership with NCEH/ATSDR, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Chamblee Campus %8 2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2011 %T Walking in two worlds: Tribal-university partnerships, capacity building, technology transfer, and developing cultural sensitivity in toxicology and environmental health research %A Sandra Uesugi %A Harding, Anna %A Stuart Harris %A Harper, Barbara %A Staci M Simonich %A Kim A Anderson %A Stone, Dave %A Jai, Y %A Hirsch, Naomi %A Cardenas, Andres %A Sudakin, Dan %B Pacific Northwest Association of Toxicologists Meeting, North Bonneville, WA %8 2011 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Assessment of bioavailable PAH compounds in water and air at near shore locations in the Gulf of Mexico pre- and post- shoreline oiling during the Deepwater Horizon oil spill %A Kim A Anderson %A Sarah E Allan %A Lane G Tidwell %A Steven G O'Connell %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Glenn R Wilson %B Invited plenary speaker, Superfund Research Program Annual Meeting %8 11/2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Bioavailable PAH compounds in coastal marine waters of the Gulf of Mexico pre and post shoreline oiling during the Deepwater Horizon oil spill %A Sarah E Allan %A Lane G Tidwell %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Steven G O'Connell %A Glenn R Wilson %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 31st Annual Conference %8 11/2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Biological Response Indicator Devices for Gauging Environmental Stressors (BRIDGES), demonstrated the sensitivity of the BRIDGES bio-analytical tool for detecting spatially distinct toxicity in aquatic systems %A Kim A Anderson %B Invited Webinar Speaker: NIEHS “Risk eLearning” joint webinar program with EPA. Using Ecological-Based Tools and Approaches to Assess Bioavailability (archived online %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Can consumers trust salmon production method labels through the use of chemical profiling? %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Brian W Smith %A Kim A Anderson %B platform presentation, ACS Spring Conference %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T A Case Study in Tribal-University Collaboration: Air Sampling on the Swinomish Reservation %A Kim A Anderson %B invited speaker, Superfund Research Program Annual Meeting %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Deepwater Horizon Disaster %A Kim A Anderson %B NIEHS Webinar %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Demonstrating Silicone Passive Samplers in a Model Urban Harbor and Superfund Site for a Suite of Semi-polar Organic Contaminants %A Steven G O'Connell %B SETAC North America 31st Annual Conference %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Evidence that the DAP biomarker may lead to overestimates of organophosphate pesticide exposure %A Norman D Forsberg %A Rodriguez-Proteau, R %A Maier, C S %A Jeffrey J Jenkins %A Morré, J %A Glenn R Wilson %A Kim A Anderson %B platform presentation, 239th American Chemical Society conference %8 03/2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T In vitro and in vivo experiments suggest that measurement of urinary dialkylphosphates may lead to overestimates of human OP pesticide exposure %A Norman D Forsberg %A Rodriguez-Proteau, R %A Christensen, J M %A Maier, C S %A Jeffrey J Jenkins %A Kim A Anderson %B platform presentation, SETAC 2010 %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Ketone and Quinone Substituted PAH Profiles from Remote and Urban Atmospheric Particulate Matter %A Julie A Layshock %A Staci M Simonich %A Kim A Anderson %B SETAC North America 31st Annual Conference %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Portland Harbor and the Gulf of Mexico %A Kim A Anderson %B Invited Speaker, Oregon Environmental Health Association %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Strategies and Challenges of Capacity Building and Technology Transfer for Environmental Monitoring in the United States and Western Africa %A Gregory J Sower %A Hillwalker, Wendy E %A Quarles, L %A Jeffrey J Jenkins %B SETAC North America 31st Annual Conference %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2010 %T Sweet Onion Field Test Kit %A Lane G Tidwell %A Richard P Scott %A Merril, Dawn %A Kevin A Hobbie %A Kim A Anderson %B invited presentation and demonstration, 2010 National Onion Association Meeting %8 2010 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2009 %T Mitigating or Eliminating Pesticide Risks in Surface Waters in the Pacific Northwest and West Africa with Targeted Research, Extension, and Education Programs %A Quarles, L %A Sarr, Makhfousse %A Hillwalker, Wendy E %A Gregory J Sower %A Kim A Anderson %B (Invited Speaker) The Use and Value of Environmental Monitoring in the Assessment and Analysis of Risks, Semi-Annual International IPM Symposium, Transcending Boundaries, Portland OR %8 03/2009 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2006 %T Trans-Pacific Atmospheric Transport of PBTs from Asia to the Pacific Northwest of the USA in Spring 2004 %A Primbs, T %A Schmedding, D %A Glenn R Wilson %A Higginbotham, C. %A Staci M Simonich %B American Chemical Society, San Francisco, CA %8 09/2006 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2005 %T Atmospheric Deposition of Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds in National Parks of the Pacific Northwest %A Hageman, K J %A Usenko, S %A Cambell, D H %A Glenn R Wilson %A Schmedding, D %A Staci M Simonich %B Puget Sound/Georgia Basin Research Conference, Seattle, WA %8 03/2005 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2005 %T Trans-Pacific Atmospheric Transport of Persistent Organic Pollutants and Other Anthropogenic Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds to a High Elevation Site in the Pacific Northwest, USA %A Primbs, T %A Schmedding, D %A Glenn R Wilson %A Higginbotham, C. %A Staci M Simonich %B DIOXIN %8 08/2005 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2004 %T Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds in Snow and Lake Water from National Parks of the Western United States %A Hageman, K J %A Usenko, S %A Glenn R Wilson %A Schmedding, D %A Cambell, D H %A Staci M Simonich %B SETAC Europe, Prague, Czechoslovakia %8 04/2004 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2004 %T Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds in Snow Collected at National Parks in the Western United States %A Hageman, K J %A Cambell, D H %A Glenn R Wilson %A Schmedding, D %A Usenko, S %A Staci M Simonich %B Fourth SETAC World Congress, Portland, OR %8 11/2004 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2004 %T Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds in Snow from National Parks of the Western United States %A Hageman, K J %A Usenko, S %A Glenn R Wilson %A Schmedding, D %A Staci M Simonich %B SETAC Europe Workshop, Milano, Italy %8 06/2004 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2003 %T Atmospheric Concentrations of Semi-Volatile Organic Pollutants on the Tip of the Olympic Peninsula of Washington: Evidence of Trans-Pacific Transport? %A Staci M Simonich %A Killin, R %A Hauser, C %A Glenn R Wilson %B Georgia Basin/Puget Sound Research Conference, Vancouver, BC %8 04/2003 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2002 %T Chemical Bioavailability in Eco-systesm: Case Study of Contaminants In Portland Harbor %A D Sethajintanin %A Johnson, Eugene R %A Loper, Bobby R %A Brian W Smith %A Kim A Anderson %B PNW SETAC Regional Mtg, Portland, OR %8 05/2002 %G eng %0 Generic %D 2002 %T Long-Range Transport of Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds to the Pacific Northwest of the U.S. in Spring 2002 %A Staci M Simonich %A Killin, R %A Hauser, C %A Glenn R Wilson %B Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Salt Lake City, UT %8 11/2002 %G eng %0 Generic %D 1998 %T The Use of Pattern Recognition methods and Neural Networks in Classification Problems %A Brian W Smith %B PITTCON®‘98 Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy, New Orleans, LA, Invited Symposium speaker %8 04/1998 %G eng %0 Generic %D 1998 %T The Use of Trace Metals in Defining Geographic Origin of Potatoes %A Kim A Anderson %A Magnuson, B. %A Brian W Smith %B PITTCON®‘98 Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy, New Orleans, LA, Invited Symposium speaker %8 04/1998 %G eng %0 Generic %D 1988 %T The Possible Role of Intramolecular Transfer of Pi-Radicals in stabilization of Arene Complexes %A Theodore A Haigh %B ACS meeting %G eng