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ITREOH currently concentrates activities in India on:
1) arsenic in drinking water, and 2) indoor air pollution, including its impact on the incidence of tuberculosis.

quicklinks:

·         arsenic in drinking water projects

·         indoor air pollution projects

·         performance sites | collaborating institutions

arsenic in drinking water


Study contact: Dr.Allan H. Smith (Program Director)
                                                         Principal Investigator of Arsenic Studies


The largest reported population exposed to arsenic-contaminated groundwater resides in West Bengal, India and neighboring Bangladesh. Here in the Bengal Basin, an estimated 800,000 inhabitants are drinking contaminated groundwater in West Bengal, India, while several millions are exposed in neighboring Bangladesh.

Early manifestations of long-term arsenic exposure include skin keratoses and hyperpigmentation. These skin lesions pose a serious public health problem because advanced forms of keratoses are painful, and may increase susceptibility to respiratory effects and later cancer risks.  Hyperpigmentation is marked by raindrop-shaped discolored spots, diffuse dark brown spots, or diffuse darkening of the skin on the limbs and trunk. Simple keratosis usually appears as bilateral thickening of the palms and soles, while in nodular keratosis, small protrusions appear on the palms and soles, with or without nodules on the dorsum of the hands, feet, or the legs. In contrast to cancers, which take decades to develop, these skin lesions are generally observed five to ten years after exposure commences.

Other health effects from ingestion of arsenic-contaminated drinking water include weakness, conjunctival congestion, hepatomegaly, portal hypertension, respiratory system effects such as bronchiectasis, polyneuropathy, solid edema of limbs, and malignant neoplasms of skin, bladder and lung.

The arsenic problems in West Bengal and Bangladesh have created a major need for skilled environmental health professionals in a region where scant training opportunities were previously available.

The ITREOH program begins to address these issues with a multidisciplinary approach -- training in a wide range of disciplines, including epidemiology and risk assessment, analytical chemistry, and population exposure assessment. Skills developed by the program to combat this crisis range from investigations of nutritional susceptibility to preventive action and evaluation of public health interventions.

Some recent projects include:

Studies of arsenic-induced skin lesions and dietary susceptibility in West Bengal, India

In collaboration with Professor D.N. Guha Mazumder, in which data from a large cross-sectional survey of about 7000 people in an arsenic exposed region in West Bengal was analyzed. The dose-response analysis linking cases of skin keratoses and hyperpigmentation to arsenic water levels was completed and published. This work led to the following subsequent projects.

 

Dose Response and Susceptibility Investigation of Skin Keratoses and Hyperpigmentation due to Ingestion of Arsenic in Drinking Water in West Bengal

The first detailed investigation of the dose-response relationship of skin lesions and arsenic in drinking water was completed by our group, including trainees in Kolkata. The investigation focused on the 280 people with skin lesions from the prevalence study who were exposed to drinking water containing less than 500 µ g/L of inorganic arsenic. This was the first detailed study to investigate dose-response relations using a refined exposure assessment which incorporated past arsenic exposures. Dietary and physical exam data, as well as water, blood, and urine samples, were collected from all cases and compared to matched controls. The key objective was to characterize the dose-response relationship, and to determine if susceptibility to the arsenic-induced skin lesions varies by arsenic methylation capability or certain nutritional factors. Several publications that involved Fogarty trainees resulted (Chung et al. 2006; Haque et al. 2003; Mitra et al. 2004) and further publications with trainees are being prepared.

 

Nested cross-sectional study of respiratory disease in highly exposed patients with arsenic-caused skin lesions

The aim of this study in West Bengal was to investigate chronic pulmonary disease, arsenic-caused skin lesions, and nutritional susceptibility factors in a cross-sectional study with follow-up investigations of prognosis. This study involved re-contacting all participants in the cross-sectional study who were found to have keratoses and/or hyperpigmentation, and who apparently consumed water containing more than 500 µg/L of arsenic, plus a re-survey of a one-to-one matched random sample of non-cases with low levels of arsenic in drinking water. Each subject is interviewed in detail about present and past water sources, urine samples were collected for arsenic methylation studies, blood samples for micronutrient analysis, family nutrition is assessed, and respiratory function measured with a portable spirometer. Two major publications have resulted so far which include Fogarty trainees (Guha Mazumder et al. 2005; von Ehrenstein et al. 2005) .

 

Arsenic in drinking water, pregnancy outcomes, and child development in West Bengal

Extensive studies have been conducted of ingestion of inorganic arsenic in drinking water and health effects in adults. So far, little has been done to investigate reproductive effects in pregnancy and effects on child development. The goal of this study was to investigate fertility, pregnancy outcomes (including spontaneous abortion and stillbirths) and child development in a retrospective study of a group of 100 women already known to have been drinking water containing more than 400 ug/L of arsenic when surveyed in 1995. These women were compared with 100 women whose drinking water contained less than 50 ug/L of arsenic. Fertility was assessed based on number of pregnancies and spacing between pregnancies. Pregnancy histories were used to compare spontaneous abortion and stillbirth rates between exposed and unexposed mothers. Living children now aged 5-15 had a medical examination and their cognitive abilities and learning achievements were assessed with structured, culturally adapted testing methods. Detailed nutritional assessment of each family was undertaken to search for a potential effect modifying role of nutrition on arsenic effects. Methylation patterns of arsenic as reflected in urine samples will be assessed, for women and children in the study, to identify metabolic susceptibility. One major publication involving Fogarty trainees, reporting a marked increase in stillbirths, has been published and other papers with trainees are currently being finalized and submitted.

Studies in Bangladesh

Groundwater used for drinking has been found to be contaminated with naturally occurring inorganic arsenic in this country neighboring West Bengal, India. It is estimated that 57 million of the 125 million inhabitants of Bangladesh are at risk of drinking contaminated water. The scale of this environmental disaster is greater than any seen in recent history, beyond the accidents at Bhopal, India, in 1984 and Chernobyl, Ukraine, in 1986.

In 2000, we published a paper suggesting guidelines for responding to a population exposure to arsenic, based upon several visits to Bangladesh by Dr. Allan Smith as a consultant for the World Health Organization (WHO) between 1997 and 1998. This paper presented the Bangladesh history of the discovery of arsenic in drinking water and recommended intervention strategies. Tubewells were inserted to provide “pure water” to prevent morbidity and mortality from gastrointestinal disease. The water from these millions of tubewells was not tested for arsenic contamination. Studies in other countries with long-term exposures indicate that 1 in 10 persons that drink water containing 500 ug of arsenic/liter may ultimately die due to arsenic-caused cancers including lung, bladder and skin cancer. The rapid allocation of funding and prompt expansion of current interventions should be facilitated. The fundamental intervention is the identification and provision of arsenic-free drinking water sources. We are currently seeking funding for a collaborative study on children in Bangladesh, which would include trainees.



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Indoor Air Pollution in India


Study contact: Dr.Kirk R. Smith (Associate Director)
                                                        Principal Investigator of Indoor Air Pollution
                                                        Studies

Indoor air pollution from combustion of solid fuels (such as wood, crop residues, animal dung, grasses, and coal) for cooking and space heating is one of the ten most important risk factors in the global burden of disease. In poor developing countries, indoor smoke from solid fuels accounts for an estimated 3.7 percent of the total disease burden. In India, approximately 80% of the population uses biomass fuel for cooking and heating.

 

The research and training activities in the indoor air pollution program emphasize the development of skills necessary to address environmental health problems in India and Nepal resulting from exposure to indoor air pollution. Researchers from India and Nepal attend Fogarty-sponsored trainings in South Asia and, in some cases, are selected to spend a semester at the University of California, Berkeley. Trainees selected to visit the university work with faculty members in the School of Public Health to receive specialized training in exposure assessment and advanced epidemiologic methods.

 

Some recent projects include:

Air pollution exposure atlas for India

There have been several publications and activities to help set the stage for development of a national air pollution exposure atlas for India.

1. A global database of indoor air pollution studies was jointly published with WHO.

2. Studies were initiated along with the World Bank office in Delhi to field test measurement and modeling techniques in Andhra Pradesh that might be used for a national atlas.

3. UCB Fogarty collaborators in India have piloted specific simplified IAQ measurement methods in four Indian states that might be used as part of a planned national household survey.

 

Exposures to respirable particulate matter associated with household fuel use

This study, part of the activities pursuant to creating a national exposure atlas, quantified the daily average concentrations of respirable particulates.

 

Health impacts of indoor air pollution evaluated via national household survey databases

Conducted jointly with Indian collaborators and the East-West Center in Honolulu, this analysis examined the association between indoor air pollution from combustion of unprocessed solid fuels (wood, animal dung, crop residues, shrubs/grass, coal) for cooking and heating and selected health outcomes in five countries—China, Georgia, India, Indonesia, and Nigeria – in which the WHO had conducted large household surveys.

 

Indoor air pollution and cataracts

This study explored the relationship between indoor air pollution and cataracts via a hospital-based case–control study conducted on the Nepal–India border, providing conclusive evidence that use of solid fuel in unflued indoor stoves is associated with increased risk of cataracts in women who do the household cooking.

 

Indoor air pollution and tuberculosis

This multi-site proposal was developed during a two-week Environmental and Occupational Epidemiology workshop held in December 2003. After review and revision, four proposals were chosen for the multi-center project: three in India and one in Nepal. Cases are restricted to women 20 years and older to minimize confounding due to tobacco smoke and because their exposure to indoor smoke is likely higher. Approximately 200 cases are being recruited at each site based on diagnosis of active pulmonary tuberculosis at the hospital during a specified period of time. Controls are selected from females who present to the Medical, Surgical, or Gynecology departments of the participating medical facilities for conditions unrelated tuberculosis, are sputum negative, and have no recent history of tuberculosis.

 

A data analysis workshop was held August 14-18, 2006 in Chennai, India. Learn more about the workshop, download presentations and view photos (coming soon).

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performance sites | collaborating institutions

 

Arsenic Health Effects

Indian Institute of Chemical Biology
Dr. Ashok Giri (Assistant Director)
     (p) 91-33-2473-6793     (f) 91-33-2414-7594
     4, Raja S.C. Mullick Road
     Kolkata 700 032 INDIA

Indoor Air Pollution

Sri Ramachandra University
Dr. Kalpana Balakrishnan

     (p) 91-44-476-5609    (f) 91-44-476-7008
     1 Ramachandra Nagar, Porur
     Chennai   600 116   INDIA

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last updated: 04.08.2008
© copyright 2006 Allan H. Smith
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