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Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and the human immune system: 4. Studies on two Spanish families with increased body burdens of highly chlorinated PCDDs

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posted on 2008-05-01, 10:56 authored by Andrew G. Smith, Marriane Hansson, Antonio Rodriguez-Pichardo, Ana Ferrer-Dufol, Reinhard T. Neubert, Jessie R. Webb, Christophe Rappe, Diether Neubert
The consequences of exposure of people to highly chlorinated polychlorodibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) are much less known than those of TCDD. We report on levels of PCDDs (and PCDFs) in 13 members of two families poisoned by contaminated cooking oil. Originally, all persons displayed chloracne as an early symptom. Persisting hexa- and higher chlorinated PCDDs could be analysed many years after exposure. Highest values found in blood lipids were: OCDD 660,000 pg/g; HpCDD 58,000 pg/g; HxCDDs: 3500 pg/g. None of the participants exhibited increased TCDD levels at the time of study. During a period of 6 years, HpCDD and OCDD disappeared from the blood lipids much faster in persons exposed as children or young adults, than from lipids of their parents. Surface receptors on blood lymphocytes of the members of the two families and the proliferative capacity of these blood cells in the presence of typical stimulants were analysed. Even in family members with the highest body burdens of hexa- to octachlorinated PCDDs we could not detect pronounced changes from a reference population with respect to the immunological markers. Minor deviations of levels of some receptors in a few, but not all, highly exposed persons suggested a similar trend to those reported in previous studies of persons with body burdens of ≥3000 pg TCDD/g blood lipids. An increase in the number of total blood lymphocytes in some subjects exposed as children may have similarity with highly TCDD-exposed children in Seveso.

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Citation

Environment International, 2008, 34 (3), pp. 330-344

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Environment International

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0160-4120

Copyright date

2007

Available date

2008-05-01

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412007000591

Language

en

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