Publications by authors named "A J Prussia"

Article Synopsis
  • Environmental exposures are common and significantly affect public health, leading to chronic and infectious diseases, but there's a lack of comprehensive data on the health impacts of these contaminants.
  • Simulation science has emerged as a solution to address data gaps by using computational methods like PBPK modeling and QSAR modeling to assess environmental health risks more efficiently.
  • The ATSDR (Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry) effectively utilizes these simulation tools, gaining recognition from external researchers and collaborating across various sectors to enhance public health protection.
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Substances of unknown or variable composition, complex reaction products, and biological materials (UVCBs) are commonly found in the environment. However, assessing their human toxicological risk is challenging due to their variable composition and many constituents. Metal naphthenate salts are one such category of UVCBs that are the reaction products of naphthenic acids with metals to form complex mixtures.

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SARS-CoV-2 is a positive-sense RNA virus that requires an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) for replication of its viral genome. Nucleoside analogs such as Remdesivir and β-d-N-hydroxycytidine are antiviral candidates and may function as chain terminators or induce viral mutations, thus impairing RdRp function. Recently disclosed Cryo-EM structures of , RNA-bound, and inhibitor-bound SARS-CoV-2 RdRp provided insight into the inhibitor-bound structure by capturing the enzyme with its reaction product: Remdesivir covalently bound to the RNA primer strand.

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For short-term chemical inhalation exposures to hazardous chemicals, the incidence of a health effect in biological testing usually conforms to a general linear model with a probit link function dependent on inhalant concentration C and the duration of exposure t. The National Academy's Acute Exposure Guideline Levels (AEGLs) Committee relies on these models when establishing AEGLs. Threshold concentrations at AEGL durations are established by the toxic load equation C x t = constant, which toxic load exponent n (TLE or n-value) directly follows from the bivariate probit model.

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Objective: Dimethyl sulfide (DMS, CAS 75-18-3) is an industrial chemical. It is both an irritant and neurotoxicant that may be life-threatening because of accidental release. The effects of DMS on public health and associated public health response depend on the exposure concentration and duration.

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