Skip directly to search Skip directly to A to Z list Skip directly to navigation Skip directly to page options Skip directly to site content

Step 2.3 Evaluating Exposures for Possible Health Effects

Focus of Literature Review

Health assessors look for the following when researching chemical information:

The no-observed-adverse-effects-level (NOAEL)

The NOAEL is the dose of a chemical at which no adverse health effects are identified between the study animals or population (the group exposed to the chemical) and the control animals or population (the group with no exposure to the chemical). Effects or changes in the study animals or population may be produced at this dose, but the effects are not considered harmful.

The lowest-observed-adverse-effects-level (LOAEL)

The LOAEL is the lowest dose of a chemical at which adverse health effects are identified between the study animals or population (the group exposed to the chemical) and the control animals or population (the group with no exposure to the chemical). Examples of possible adverse health effects identified at the LOAEL may include decreases in strength or lower birth weights for offspring.

The mechanisms of toxic actions

A mechanism of toxic action describes how a chemical acts in the body to cause harm. For example, the chemical may react with cell membranes and prevent normal cell repair.

The strengths and weaknesses of the studies

The literature often discusses the strengths and weaknesses of studies. A strength may be that an epidemiologic study considered exposures to both males and females, whereas a weakness may be that the study did not consider exposure to pregnant females and effects on the fetus. Identifying the strengths and weaknesses in a study can help a health assessor decide whether the study has enough similarities to site-specific conditions and concerns to use the study as part of the evaluation.

 

Epidemiologic studies that are reviewed should be studies similar to those at the site under evaluation in regards to

  • Exposed population
  • Exposure conditions
  • Chemicals

ATSDR's approach to evaluating studies on which exceeded health guidelines are based

ATSDR's approach to evaluating site-specific health effects data

Sources of toxicity data and epidemiologic studies

ATSDR's Toxicological Profiles ( http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxpro2.html ) are a primary source of information for toxicity data and epidemiologic studies.

Other toxicity data and epidemiology study results can be found through searches of TOXNET ( http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/ ) or PUBMED ( http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/ ), which are maintained by the National Library of Medicine.

Advanced exercise on determining possible health effects

Print/Text Version

< Previous | Next >

Top