Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 127
pro vyhledávání: '"Frederick J. Miller"'
Autor:
Renaud Vincent, Premkumari Kumarathasan, Patrick Goegan, Stephen G. Bjarnason, Josée Guénette, Subramanian Karthikeyan, Errol M. Thomson, Ian Y. Adamson, William P. Watkinson, Bruno Battistini, Frederick J. Miller
Publikováno v:
Chemosphere. 296
Short-term increases in particulate matter (PM) are associated with heightened morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular causes. Inhalation of PM is known to increase endothelin (ET)-1 levels. Yet, less is known about particle composition-related c
Autor:
Bahman Asgharian, Frederick J. Miller, Timothy B. Bentley, Owen T. Price, Jeffry D. Schroeter, Daniel R. Einstein, Richard A. Corley
Publikováno v:
Journal of Aerosol Science. 99:107-124
Despite increasing use of pigs as surrogates for humans in inhalation studies, measurements of particle deposition in the lungs of pigs are lacking. No comprehensive models are available for deposition of inhaled particles in the lungs of pigs to bri
Publikováno v:
Journal of Aerosol Science. 99:14-26
A little over a decade ago, the first UC Irvine dosimetry conference was held entitled “Frontiers in Aerosol Dosimetry Research”. At that time, mechanistic dosimetry models, such as the multiple path particle dosimetry (MPPD) model, primarily foc
Publikováno v:
Inhalation toxicology. 29(12-14)
Study of the mode of action (MOA) relating exposure to a given chemical with an associated adverse outcome is an iterative process with each iteration driven by new understandings of the relevant biology. Here, we revisit a previously described, MOA-
Autor:
Frederick J. Miller, Judith A. Graham
Publikováno v:
Indoor Air and Human Health ISBN: 9781351073479
Indoor Air and Human Health
Indoor Air and Human Health
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::86ff6b6fad8b6e68f8d288b9743f43e4
https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351073479-26
https://doi.org/10.1201/9781351073479-26
Publikováno v:
Inhalation Toxicology. 17:317-334
Direct calculation of delivered dose in the species of interest potentially affects the magnitude of an uncertainty factor needed to address extrapolation of laboratory animal data to equivalent human exposure scenarios, thereby improving the accurac
Autor:
Frederick J. Miller, Daniel L. Costa, Margaret G. Menache, Ling-Yi Chang, Judith A. Graham, B. L. Stockstill, Ying Huang, Elaine C. Grose, James D. Crapo
Publikováno v:
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology
Electron microscopic morphometry was used to study the development of lung injury during and after chronic (78 weeks) exposure to a pattern of ozone (O3) designed to simulate high urban ambient concentrations that occur in some environments. The dail
Autor:
Rory B. Conolly, Paul M. Schlosser, Frederick J. Miller, Julia S. Kimbell, Darin Kalisak, Julian Preston, Derek B. Janszen
Publikováno v:
Toxicological Sciences. 82:279-296
Formaldehyde inhalation at 6 ppm and above causes nasal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in F344 rats. The quantitative implications of the rat tumors for human cancer risk are of interest, since epidemiological studies have provided only equivocal evid
Autor:
Senthil Kabilan, Richard A. Corley, Jeffry D. Schroeter, Bahman Asgharian, Owen T. Price, Timothy C. Cox, Daniel R. Einstein, Richard E. Jacob, Frederick J. Miller, Timothy B. Bentley
Publikováno v:
Inhalation toxicology. 26(9)
While inhalation toxicological studies of various compounds have been conducted using a number of different strains of rats, mechanistic dosimetry models have only had tracheobronchial (TB) structural data for Long-Evans rats, detailed morphometric d
Autor:
Frederick J. Miller, J. H. Overton, Julia S. Kimbell, Ravi P. Subramaniam, Paul M. Schlosser, K. T. Morgan, Rory B. Conolly
Publikováno v:
Toxicological Sciences. 64:111-121
Interspecies extrapolations of tissue dose and tumor response have been a significant source of uncertainty in formaldehyde cancer risk assessment. The ability to account for species-specific variation of dose within the nasal passages would reduce t