| Literature DB >> 22284215 |
Lygia T Budnik1, Stefan Kloth, Marcial Velasco-Garrido, Xaver Baur.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although ozone-depleting methyl bromide was destined for phase-out by 2005, it is still widely applied as a consequence of various critical-use-exemptions and mandatory international regulations aiming to restrict the spread of pests and alien species (e.g. in globalized transport and storage). The withdrawal of methyl bromide because of its environmental risk could fortuitously help in the containment of its human toxicity.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22284215 PMCID: PMC3807750 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-11-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Toxic effects of methyl bromide (data 1990-2011)
| Effect observed | |
|---|---|
| chromosomal aberration (mammalian cells exposed to gaseous methyl bromide) | [ |
| Sister chromatid exchange and chromosome aberrations in lymphocytes | |
| O-6-alkylguanine-DNA-alkyltransferase | [ |
| genotoxic in bacteria (Ames test) | [ |
| Genotoxicity in workers exposed to methyl bromide | [ |
| toxic encephalopathies (animal experiments) | [ |
| immunoreactive HSP 70 in rat olfactory receptor neurone | [ |
| DNA methylation (rat, mice) | [ |
| reduction in the white blood cells (rat) | [ |
| increase in SCOT, SGPT activities (mice) | [ |
| hepatic and glomerular injuries (mice) | [ |
| MMP-9, matrix-metalloproteinase -9 and -2, MMP-2 expression in olfactory bulb following methal bromide gas exposure (mice) | [ |
| irritation of eyes, skin, respiratory system; muscle weakness, coordination loss, visual disturbance, dizziness; nausea, vomiting, headache; malaise (vague feeling of discomfort); hand tremor; convulsions; dyspnea (breathing difficulty); skin vesiculation; liquor frostbite; [potential occupational carcinogen] | [ |
| acute poisoning: ataxia, behavioral changes, seizures, coma chronic low level exposure: peripheral neuropathy, electroencephalogram abnormalities, deficits on the Wechsler memory scale (on 2-point discrimination at the index scale) | [ |
| headache, dizziness, nausea | [ |
| chronic exposure: central and peripheral system disorders, cerebro-vestibular and pyramidal neuropathy of lower | |
| limbs, paresthesia | |
| motor neuron disease | [ |
| acute exposure (high concentration): refractory seizures, intermittent fever, multiorgan system failure, death | [ |
| liver degenerative changes | [ |
| reduction of lung function, chest pain, shortness of breath, inflammation of the lung | [ |
| erectile dysfunction | [ |
| central nervous system toxicity and early peripheral neuropathy following dermal exposure | [ |
| diffuse lesions in the spleen of the corpus callosum | [ |
Figure 1Scheme summarizing available literature data on possible molecular mechanisms of methyl bromide effects leading to either degenerative diseases or pre-carcinogenic lesions.
Overview of epidemiological studies on methyl bromide effects (1990-2011)
| Reference | Study design | Magnitude of study | Specified measure 1 | Exposure to methyl bromide | cases | p value high vs. low | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 2003 | cohort study | occupational agriculture, farmers | 55, 332 | USA, IA, NC | exposed/controls *84/482 | 84 | 1.10 | 0.77, 1.36 | 0.004 |
| low exposure | 6 | 2.73 | 1.18, 6.33 | |||||||
| high exposure | 5 | 3.47 | 1.37, 8.76 | |||||||
| [ | 2010 | data analysis | occupational agriculture, farmers | 55, 332 | USA, IA, NC | 5 | 3.47 | 1.37, 8.76 | 0.004 | |
| [ | 2003 | case-control study | occupational agriculture, Hispanic farm workers | 1, 332 | USA, CA | exposed/controls 121/1110 | 64 | 1.17 | 0.77, 1.75 | 0.25 |
| low exposure | 37 | 1.20 | 0.66, 2.18 | |||||||
| high exposure | 32 | 1.59 | 0.77, 3.30 | |||||||
| [ | 2011 | case-control study | population, near intensive agricult. areas | USA, CA | exposed/controls 173/162 | 87 | 1.62 | 1.02, 2.59 | 0.1 | |
| low exposure | 45 | 1.81 | 1.03, 3.18 | |||||||
| high exposure | 42 | 1.45 | 0.82, 2.57 | |||||||
| [ | 2010 | data analysis | occupational agriculture, farmers | 55, 332 | USA, IA, NC | 5 | 3.47 | 1.37, 8.76 | 0.004 | |
| toxic effects | ||||||||||
| [ | 2006 | cohort study | population, farmers' wives | USA, CA | exposed/controls *145/797 | 1.82 | 1.02-3.24 | |||
Figure 2Meta-analysis of cancer risk after exposure to methyl bromide. The data showing all epidemiological studies clearly related to methyl bromide exposure (1990-2011) was analysed as described in the methods.