Publications by authors named "Josee Doucet"

Background: There is general concern that persistent organic pollutants (POPs) found in the environment, wildlife, food, water, house dust, human tissues, and fluids may alter normal human physiologic activities (e.g., fetal development, immune and endocrine systems).

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Isomers and metabolites of the organochlorine pesticide chlordane persist in the environment and bioaccumulate in Arctic marine food webs. Rodent studies indicate that there are gender-related differences in trans-nonachlor and oxychlordane metabolism. Thus, comparative tissue depletion studies were undertaken in male and female rats exposed to trans-nonachlor, oxychlordane, or trans-chlordane at 2.

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The chlordane constituent trans-nonachlor and its metabolite oxychlordane are among the most persistent chlordane-related contaminants and are found in tissues and milk from humans ingesting diets high in Arctic marine mammal fat. Although chlordane is no longer registered in North America, there is a need for toxicological data on chlordane-related contaminants found in food and the environment which are either structurally different or relatively more abundant than the constituents of the original chlordane mixture. Thus, a feeding study was undertaken to provide toxicological data on trans-nonachlor.

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Humans are always exposed to mixtures of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), so assessment of their health effects is complicated. Because the original sources are relatively standard mixtures that change in predictable ways while traversing the environment, there is substantial uniformity in the congener mixtures people carry. To the extent that concentrations are highly correlated, measuring multiple congeners within correlated groups would be unnecessary and estimation of separate biologic effects would be impossible.

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Dietary exposure of Inuit people to a mixture of pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls, or persistent organic pollutants (POPs), during pregnancy is a public health concern. We examined the consequences of administering the mixture of 28 POPs found in the Inuit diet (at doses representing 10-1000 times dietary levels) by gavage to pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats either during gestation days 0-19 or 8-19. The levels of individual components of the POPs mixture in the maternal liver were measured by high-resolution mass spectrometry.

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Due to widespread usage of the pesticide chlordane until the 1980's, this toxic and persistent mixture has accumulated in the food chain. The Arctic acts as a global sink for these and other persistent organic pollutants, which bioaccumulate in the marine and freshwater food chains. As a result, humans consuming diets high in Arctic fish and marine mammal fat can ingest higher levels of chlordane contaminants than humans consuming "southern" diets.

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