|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book is based on an international meeting organized by the
University of Tokyo and the University of Rochester, and is
published as one belonging to the series of Rochester International
Conferences in Environmental Toxicity. The meeting on "Advances in
Mercury Toxicology" was held at the University of Tokyo on August 1
to 3, 1990. The invited papers are published in this book along
with an "Overview" chapter that was written by the editors at a
meeting held at the University of Rochester on August 1 to 2, 1991.
The purpose of the meeting was to assemble leading scientists to
discuss their most recent findings on the toxicology of mercury.
The time was opportune. Considerable progress has been made on the
environmental fate and toxicology of mercury. Recent findings have
given new insight into the global model for mercury. Transport in
the atmosphere extends great distances resulting in pollution of
lakes and rivers far distant from the source of mercury release.
The process of methylation leads to accumulation of methylmercury
in fish and thus in the human diet. New evidence indicates that
acid rain and the impoundment of water for hydroelectric purposes
affects the methylation and bioaccumulation processes resulting in
higher levels of methylmercury in fish.
This book is based on an international meeting organized by the
University of Tokyo and the University of Rochester, and is
published as one belonging to the series of Rochester International
Conferences in Environmental Toxicity. The meeting on "Advances in
Mercury Toxicology" was held at the University of Tokyo on August 1
to 3, 1990. The invited papers are published in this book along
with an "Overview" chapter that was written by the editors at a
meeting held at the University of Rochester on August 1 to 2, 1991.
The purpose of the meeting was to assemble leading scientists to
discuss their most recent findings on the toxicology of mercury.
The time was opportune. Considerable progress has been made on the
environmental fate and toxicology of mercury. Recent findings have
given new insight into the global model for mercury. Transport in
the atmosphere extends great distances resulting in pollution of
lakes and rivers far distant from the source of mercury release.
The process of methylation leads to accumulation of methylmercury
in fish and thus in the human diet. New evidence indicates that
acid rain and the impoundment of water for hydroelectric purposes
affects the methylation and bioaccumulation processes resulting in
higher levels of methylmercury in fish.
This book is based on reviews and research presentations given at
the 16th Rochester International Conference on Environmental
Toxicity, entitled liThe Cytoskeleton: A Target for Toxic Agents,"
held on June 4, 5 and 6 in 1984. The conference provided an
in-depth discussion of the effects a d mechanism of action of some
toxic agents on the cytoskeleton. Mamma"lian and other eukaryotic
cells contain protein networks within the cytoplasm comprised of
microfilaments, intermediate Hlaments and microtubules. These
components of the cytoskeleton playa key role in cell shape,
motility, intracellular organization and transport, and cell
division. Furthermore, the cytoskeleton, via associations with the
cell membrane, appears to function in intracellular communication
and cellular responses to membrane events. Because of the complex
functional roles of the cytoskeleton which vary with cell type,
degree of differentiation, and cell cycle, its disruption may
result in a variety of cellular changes. This expanding field in
cell biology has already attracted the interest of toxicologists
and environmental health scientists as a potentially fruitful area
of research. Indeed, there is mounting evidence that certain toxic
and chemotherapeutic compounds, as well as physical agents such as
radiation and hydrostatic pressure, disrupt the normal structure
and function of the cytoskeleton. This may be an important step in
the overall expression of their action. It was, therefore, an
opportune time to hold a conference to encourage the development of
this area of toxicology and to suggest directions for future
research.
This document is the result of a conference on "Biological
Monitoring of Metals" held in Rochester, June 2-6, 1986, organized
jointly by the Environmental Health Sciences Center of the School
of Medicine and Dentistry of the University of Rochester, NY, and
the Scientific Committee on the Toxicology of Metals within the
International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH) at the
Karolinska Institute and the National (Swedish) Institute of
Environmental Medicine and the University of Umea, Sweden. The aim
of the Conference was to define and evaluate the scientific basis
for the biological monitoring of metals. The conference was
co-sponsored by the World Health Organization through its
International Program on Chemical Safety and received substantial
encouragement and support from the Swedish Work Environmental Fund
and the United States Environmental Protection Agency. This was the
second conference organized jointly by the Scientific Committee on
the Toxicology of Metals and The Toxicology Division of the
University of Rochester. The previous joint conference was held in
1982 on the Reproductive and Developmental Toxicity of Metals. In
addition, conferences have been organized by each group (see
Appendices A and B). Several of these conferences are specially
relevant to the topic of the current conference. These include the
joint conference mentioned above and the conferences on dose-effect
and dose-response relationship held in Tokyo in 1974 and on
accumulation of metals held in Buenos Aires in 1972.
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R391
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
|