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2006| January-March | Volume 8 | Issue 30
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ARTICLES
Transportation noise and cardiovascular risk: Updated Review and synthesis of epidemiological studies indicate that the evidence has increased
Wolfgang Babisch
January-March 2006, 8(30):1-29
DOI
:10.4103/1463-1741.32464
PMID
:17513892
The review provides an overview of epidemiological studies that were carried out in the field of community noise and cardiovascular risk. The studies and their characteristics are listed in the tables. Risk estimates derived from the individual studies are given for 5 dB(A) categories of the average A-weighted sound pressure level during the day. The noise sources considered in the studies are road and aircraft noise. The health endpoints are mean blood pressure, hypertension and ischaemic heart disease, including myocardial infarction. Study subjects are children and adults. The evidence of an association between transportation noise and cardiovascular risk has increased since the previous review published in Noise and Health in the year 2000.
[ABSTRACT]
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[CITATIONS]
[PubMed]
32,697
1,084
189
Audiological findings in workers exposed to styrene alone or in concert with noise
Ann-Christin Johnson, Thais C Morata, Ann-Cathrine Lindblad, Per R Nylen, Eva B Svensson, Edward Krieg, Aleksandar Aksentijevic, Deepak Prasher
January-March 2006, 8(30):45-57
DOI
:10.4103/1463-1741.32467
PMID
:17513895
Audiological testing, interviews and exposure measurements were used to collect data on the health effects of styrene exposures in 313 workers from fiberglass and metal-product manufacturing plants and a mail terminal. The audiological test battery included pure-tone audiometry, distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAE), psychoacoustic modulation transfer function, interrupted speech, speech recognition in noise and cortical response audiometry (CRA). Workers exposed to noise and styrene had significantly poorer pure-tone thresholds in the high-frequency range (3 to 8 kHz) than the controls, noise-exposed workers and those listed in a Swedish age-specific database. Even though abnormalities were noted on DPOAE and CRA testing, the interrupted speech and speech recognition in noise tests were the more sensitive tests for styrene effects. Further research is needed on the underlying mechanisms to understand the effects of styrene and on audiological test batteries to detect changes in populations exposed to solvents.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
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[CITATIONS]
[PubMed]
12,838
295
33
Waking levels of salivary biomarkers are altered following sleep in a lab with no further increase associated with simulated night-time noise exposure
David S Michaud, Susan M Miller, Catherine Ferrarotto, Anne TM Konkle, Stephen E Keith, Kenneth B Campbell
January-March 2006, 8(30):30-39
DOI
:10.4103/1463-1741.32465
PMID
:17513893
The goals of this study were twofold. First, we assessed if waking salivary hormone profiles are altered by nighttime noise exposure in a laboratory environment. Second, we evaluated the potential influence that sleeping in the lab in itself may have had on salivary biomarkers, by comparing results obtained following sleep at home. Twelve adults (7 males, 5 females) between 19-25 yrs slept at home and in a sleep laboratory. Subjects provided six saliva samples during waking hours on the day prior to sleep in the lab, on both days after sleeping in the lab and on the day following the resumption of sleep at home. Following one night of adaptation, subjects were exposed throughout the 2
nd
night to simulated backup alarms that consisted of trains of 5 consecutive 500 ms duration audible tones. The time between the onset of each tone was 1 s and the time between trains (offset to onset) was 15 to 20 s. When compared to home conditions, cortisol and melatonin levels were higher following sleep in the laboratory 30 minutes after awakening. However, no significant differences were noted for any salivary biomarker between the 1
st
and 2
nd
night in the sleep lab, suggesting that these endpoints were not influenced by exposure to noise on the 2
nd
night. Waking profiles of alpha-amylase were not influenced by where the subjects slept. Subjective reports of sleep disturbance following sleep in the lab were also obtained. For most of the day there was no apparent influence of the laboratory noise exposure. However, subjects did report more sleepiness during the evening (8 pm) following the 2
nd
night in the laboratory. In general, overall sleep quality was rated slightly higher upon awakening from sleep at home. Factors that might have contributed to the observations in this study are discussed, including those related to the potentially non-representative sample.
[ABSTRACT]
[FULL TEXT]
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[CITATIONS]
[PubMed]
9,553
370
11
Hearing loss in young men: Possible aetiological factors
Ulf Rosenhall, Ilmari Pyykko, Finn Rasmussen, Per Muhr
January-March 2006, 8(30):40-44
DOI
:10.4103/1463-1741.32466
PMID
:17513894
In the present retrospective register study a very large data base consisting of screening audiograms obtained at military conscription of 18-year-old Swedish men was used. The study group comprised 450,175 men, aged 18 years, tested at conscription to military service. There were nine age groups covering a 24-year period, from 1971 to 1995. This database was compared with a number of different pre- and postnatal factors with possible influence on the hearing function. This ecologic methodology gives tentative clues (but no proof) of possible ototraumatic influences. The hearing capacity was fairly similar during the entire span of the study and only small variations were observed. There was a slight tendency of better hearing capacity in the later age groups, compared with the earlier ones. The mean thresholds of the frequencies 4 and 6 kHz were slightly elevated in 1971, 1976 and, to some extent also in1992. We tried to calculate the levels of leisure noise exposure during the study period. There was no apparent tendency of reduced noise levels, on the contrary the noise levels seemed to increase. The treatment programmes for acute otitis media (AOM) underwent considerable changes during the period from the early fifties to the early eighties, when the participants were pre-school children. One possible explanation for the slight improvement of the hearing capacity could be less ototraumatic influence of AOM. Data about the occurrence of four common epidemic diseases, covering the periods preceding and succeeding the years when the participants were born indicated that influenza and possibly pertussis (whooping cough), constitute putative prenatal risk factors for mild to moderate high frequency hearing loss.
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7,785
285
1
LITERATURE UPDATE
Estimating noise-induced permanent threshold shift from audiometric shape: The ISO-1999 model
RA Dobie
January-March 2006, 8(30):61-61
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3,599
170
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The global burden of occupational noise-induced hearing loss
DI Nelson, RY Nelson, M Concha-Barrientos
January-March 2006, 8(30):60-60
[FULL TEXT]
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3,558
204
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Proposed criteria for assessing low frequency noise annoyance in occupational settings
M Pawlaczyk-Luszczynska, W Szymczak, A Dudarewicz, M Sliwinska-Kowalska
January-March 2006, 8(30):58-58
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
3,021
178
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Exposure-effect relations between aircraft and road traffic noise exposure at school and reading comprehension: The RANCH project
C Clark, R Martin, E van Kempen, T Alfred, J Head, HW Davies
January-March 2006, 8(30):58-58
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
3,078
117
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Hypertension and exposure to noise near airports (HYENA): Study design and noise exposure assessment
L Jarup, ML Dudley, W Babisch, D Houthuijs, W Swart, G Pershagen
January-March 2006, 8(30):58-59
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
2,950
137
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Race and sex differences in age-related hearing loss: The health, aging and body composition study
EP Helzner, JA Cauley, SR Pratt, SR Wisniewski, JM Zmuda, EO Talbott
January-March 2006, 8(30):62-62
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2,960
91
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Evaluation of occupational environment in two textile plants in Northern India with specific reference to noise
R Bedi
January-March 2006, 8(30):59-59
[FULL TEXT]
[PDF]
2,914
91
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Working in noise with a hearing loss: Perceptions from workers, supervisors and hearing conservation program managers
TC Morata, CL Themann, RF Randolph, BL Verbsky, DC Byrne, ER Reeves
January-March 2006, 8(30):61-62
[FULL TEXT]
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[CITATIONS]
2,802
102
1
Evaluation of individual susceptibility to noise-induced hearing loss in textile workers in China
J Lu, X Cheng, Y Li, L Zeng, Y Zhao
January-March 2006, 8(30):62-62
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2,795
105
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Characteristics of tinnitus in a population of 555 patients: Specificities of tinnitus induced by noise trauma
C Nicolas-Puel, T Akbaraly, R Lloyd, C Berr, A Uziel, G Rebillard, JL Puel
January-March 2006, 8(30):60-60
[FULL TEXT]
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2,775
101
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Individual susceptibility to noise-induced hearing loss: Choosing an optimal method of retrospective classification of workers into noise-susceptible and noise-resistant groups
M Sliwinska-Kowalska, A Dudarewicz, P Kotylo, E Zamyslowska-Szmytke, M Pawlaczyk-luszczynska, A Gajda-Szadkowska
January-March 2006, 8(30):59-60
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2,697
112
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Noise-induced hearing loss is exacerbated by long-term smoking
DC Wild, MJ Brewster, AR Banerjee
January-March 2006, 8(30):61-61
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2,701
96
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Hearing loss in military aviation and other trades: Investigation of prevalence and risk factors
SM Abel
January-March 2006, 8(30):60-61
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2,601
90
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Noise level in a pediatric intensive care unit
WB Carvalho, ML Pedreira, MA de Aguiar
January-March 2006, 8(30):62-62
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2,586
100
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Long-term assessment of auditory changes resulting from a single noise exposure associated with non-occupational activities
N Schmuzigert, K Fostiropoulos, R Probst
January-March 2006, 8(30):59-59
[FULL TEXT]
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2,564
89
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