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As a result of the industrial revolution, man's technological
achievements have been truly great, increasing the quality of life
to almost unimagined proportions; but all this progress has not
been accomplished without equally un imagined health risks.
Sufficiently diagnostic short-term assay procedures have been
developed in recent years for us to determine that there are
mutagenic agents among thou sands of chemicals to which the human
population is exposed today. These chemicals were not significantly
present prior to the indus trial revolution. As of today, there are
no procedures available which have been adequately demonstrated to
assess individual sus ceptibility to genotoxic exposures, and as a
result we have had to rely on extrapolating toxicological data from
animal model systems. The question is can we afford to allow such
an increased environ mental selection pressure via mutagenic
exposures to occur without expecting adverse long-term effects on
our health. It is apparent from this line of reasoning that what is
lacking and immediately needed are test procedures that can be
applied to humans to assess genotoxic exposure as well as
individual susceptibility to it. There have already been two
conferences which have focused at tention on this research area.
"Guidelines for studies of human populations exposed to mutagenic
and reproductive hazards" (A. D. Bloom, ed., March of Dimes Birth
Defects Foundation, White Plains, New York, 1981) and "Indicators
of genotoxic exposure in humans" (Banbury Report 13, B. A. Bridges,
B. E. Butterworth, and I. B."
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