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Changes in use of cigarettes and non-cigarette alternative products among college students 2015 Department of Kinesiology & Health Education, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, United States. Electronic address: alexandra.loukas@austin.utexas.edu.; Institute for Applied Research in Youth Development, Eliot-Pearson Department of Chi
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Addictive Behaviors
Periodical, Abbrev.
Addict.Behav.
Pub Date Free Form
Oct
Volume
49
Issue
Start Page
46
Other Pages
51
Notes
CI: Copyright (c) 2015; JID: 7603486; OTO: NOTNLM; 2015/01/05 [received]; 2015/04/26 [revised]; 2015/05/08 [accepted]; 2015/05/16 [aheadofprint]; ppublish
Place of Publication
England
ISSN/ISBN
1873-6327; 0306-4603
Accession Number
PMID: 26046401
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; IM
DOI
10.1016/j.addbeh.2015.05.005 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
26046401
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The present study examined change in use of various smoked and smokeless non-cigarette alternative products in a sample of college students, stratified by current, or past 30-day, cigarette smoking status. METHODS: Participants were 698 students from seven four-year colleges in Texas. Participants completed two waves of online surveys regarding tobacco use, knowledge, and attitudes, with 14 months between each wave. RESULTS: The most prevalent products used by the entire sample at Wave 1 were cigarettes, followed by hookah, cigars/cigarillos/little cigars, and electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes). At Wave 2, prevalence of e-cigarette use surpassed use of cigars/cigarillos/little cigars. Snus and chew/snuff/dip were relatively uncommon at both waves. Examination of change in use indicated that e-cigarette use increased across time among both current cigarette smokers and non-cigarette smokers. Prevalence of current e-cigarette use doubled across the 14-month period to 25% among current smokers and tripled to 3% among non-cigarette smokers. Hookah use also increased across time, but only among non-cigarette smokers, whereas it decreased among current cigarette smokers. Use of all other non-cigarette alternatives remained unchanged across time. Logistic regression analysis was used to examine the socio-demographic predictors of Wave 2 e-cigarette use, the only product that increased in use among both current cigarette smokers and non-cigarette smokers. Results indicated that Wave 1 current cigarette use and Wave 1 current e-cigarette use, but not gender, age, or race/ethnicity, were significantly associated with Wave 2 e-cigarette use. CONCLUSIONS: Findings underscore the need to track changes in the use of non-cigarette alternatives and call for additional research examining the factors contributing to change in use.
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Data Source
Authors
Loukas,A., Batanova,M., Fernandez,A., Agarwal,D.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20150516
PMCID
Editors
Changes in youth cigarette use and intentions following implementation of a tobacco control program: findings from the Florida Youth Tobacco Survey, 1998-2000 2000 Florida Department of Health-HSDE, 4052 Bald Cypress Way, Bin # A-12, Tallahassee, FL 32399-1720, USA. ursula_bauer@doh.state.fl.us
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Jama
Periodical, Abbrev.
JAMA
Pub Date Free Form
9-Aug
Volume
284
Issue
6
Start Page
723
Other Pages
728
Notes
LR: 20140917; JID: 7501160; ppublish
Place of Publication
UNITED STATES
ISSN/ISBN
0098-7484; 0098-7484
Accession Number
PMID: 10927781
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.; AIM; IM
DOI
joc00237 [pii]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
10927781
Abstract
CONTEXT: Many states are developing tobacco use prevention and reduction programs, and current data on tobacco use behaviors and how these change over time in response to program activities are needed for program design, implementation, and evaluation. OBJECTIVES: To assess changes in youth cigarette use and intentions following implementation of the Florida Pilot Program on Tobacco Control. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Self-administered survey conducted prior to program implementation (1998), and 1 and 2 years (1999, 2000) later among a sample of Florida public middle school and high school students who were classified as never users, experimenters, current users, and former users of cigarettes based on survey responses. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Changes in cigarette use status, intentions, and behaviors among students over a 2-year period. RESULTS: Surveys were completed by 22,540, 20,978, and 23, 745 students attending 255, 242, and 243 Florida public middle and high schools in 1998, 1999 and 2000, respectively. Response rates for the 3 survey years ranged from 80% to 82% and 72% to 82% for the middle school and high school surveys, respectively. After 2 years, current cigarette use dropped from 18.5% to 11.1% (P<.001) among middle school students and from 27.4% to 22.6% (P =.01) among high school students. Prevalence of never use increased from 56.4% to 69. 3% (P<.001) and from 31.9% to 43.1% (P =.001) among middle school and high school students, respectively. Prevalence of experimenting decreased among middle school and high school students from 21.4% to 16.2% (P<.001) and from 32.8% to 28.2% (P<.001), respectively. Among never users, the percentage of committed nonsmokers increased from 67.4% to 76.9% (P<.001) and from 73.7% to 79.3% (P<.001) among middle school and high school students, respectively. Among experimenters, the percentage of students who said they will not smoke again increased from 30.4% to 42.0% (P<.001) in middle school and from 44.4% to 51.0% (P<.001) in high school. CONCLUSIONS: Progress toward reduction of youth tobacco use was observed in each of the 2 years of Florida's Pilot Program on Tobacco Control. Our results suggest that a comprehensive statewide program can be effective in preventing and reducing youth tobacco use. JAMA. 2000;284:723-728
Descriptors
Adolescent, Data Collection, Female, Florida/epidemiology, Humans, Male, Program Evaluation, Smoking/epidemiology/prevention & control
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Bauer,U. E., Johnson,T. M., Hopkins,R. S., Brooks,R. G.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Changes to the N cycle following bark beetle outbreaks in two contrasting conifer forest types 2012 Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA. jgriffin2@wisc.edu
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Oecologia
Periodical, Abbrev.
Oecologia
Pub Date Free Form
Oct
Volume
170
Issue
2
Start Page
551
Other Pages
565
Notes
JID: 0150372; 0 (Soil); 2011/04/28 [received]; 2012/03/26 [accepted]; 2012/04/11 [aheadofprint]; ppublish
Place of Publication
Germany
ISSN/ISBN
1432-1939; 0029-8549
Accession Number
PMID: 22492169
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.; IM
DOI
10.1007/s00442-012-2323-y [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
22492169
Abstract
Outbreaks of Dendroctonus beetles are causing extensive mortality in conifer forests throughout North America. However, nitrogen (N) cycling impacts among forest types are not well known. We quantified beetle-induced changes in forest structure, soil temperature, and N cycling in Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forests of Greater Yellowstone (WY, USA), and compared them to published lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia) data. Five undisturbed stands were compared to five beetle-killed stands (4-5 years post-outbreak). We hypothesized greater N cycling responses in Douglas-fir due to higher overall N stocks. Undisturbed Douglas-fir stands had greater litter N pools, soil N, and net N mineralization than lodgepole pine. Several responses to disturbance were similar between forest types, including a pulse of N-enriched litter, doubling of soil N availability, 30-50 % increase in understory cover, and 20 % increase in foliar N concentration of unattacked trees. However, the response of some ecosystem properties notably varied by host forest type. Soil temperature was unaffected in Douglas-fir, but lowered in lodgepole pine. Fresh foliar %N was uncorrelated with net N mineralization in Douglas-fir, but positively correlated in lodgepole pine. Though soil ammonium and nitrate, net N mineralization, and net nitrification all doubled, they remained low in both forest types (
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Griffin,J.M., Turner,M.G.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20120411
PMCID
Editors
Changing conclusions on secondhand smoke in a sudden infant death syndrome review funded by the tobacco industry 2005 Division of General Internal Medicine Fellowship Program, Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-1390, USA.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Pediatrics
Periodical, Abbrev.
Pediatrics
Pub Date Free Form
Mar
Volume
115
Issue
3
Start Page
e356
Other Pages
66
Notes
LR: 20071115; GR: 1-T32-HP-19025/PHS HHS/United States; GR: CA-87472/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States; JID: 0376422; 0 (Tobacco Smoke Pollution); OID: KIE: 128807; OID: NRCBL: VF 1.3.9; OTO: KIE; GN: KIE: 78 refs.; GN: KIE: KIE Bib: biomedical research; fraud
Place of Publication
United States
ISSN/ISBN
1098-4275; 0031-4005
Accession Number
PMID: 15741361
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.; AIM; E; IM
DOI
115/3/e356 [pii]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
15741361
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prenatal and postnatal exposure to tobacco smoke adversely affects maternal and child health. Secondhand smoke (SHS) has been linked causally with sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) in major health reports. In 1992, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) first noted an association between SHS and SIDS, and both prenatal exposure and postnatal SHS exposure were listed as independent risk factors for SIDS in a 1997 California EPA report (republished in 1999 by the National Cancer Institute) and a 2004 US Surgeon General report. The tobacco industry has used scientific consultants to attack the evidence that SHS causes disease, most often lung cancer. Little is known about the industry's strategies to contest the evidence on maternal and child health. In 2001, a review was published on SIDS that acknowledged funding from the Philip Morris (PM) tobacco company. Tobacco industry documents related to this review were examined to identify the company's influence on the content and conclusions of this review. METHODS: Tobacco industry documents include 40 million pages of internal memos and reports made available to the public as a result of litigation settlements against the tobacco industry in the United States. Between November 2003 and January 2004, we searched tobacco industry document Internet sites from the University of California Legacy Tobacco Documents Library and the Tobacco Documents Online website. Key terms included "SIDS" and names of key persons. Two authors conducted independent searches with similar key terms, reviewed the documents, and agreed on relevancy through consensus. Thirty documents were identified as relevant. Two drafts (an early version and a final version) of an industry-funded review article on SIDS were identified, and 2 authors independently compared these drafts with the final publication. Formal comments by PM executives made in response to the first draft were also reviewed. We used Science Citation Index in July 2004 to determine citation patterns for the referenced SIDS reviews. RESULTS: PM executives feared that SHS and maternal and child health issues would create a powerful and emotional impetus for smoke-free areas in the home, public areas, and the workplace. In response to the 1992 US EPA report on SHS, the Science and Technology Department of PM's Switzerland subsidiary, Fabriques de Tabac Reunies, searched for "independent" consultants to publish articles addressing SHS. The first industry-funded article was a literature review focusing on smoking and SIDS, conducted by consultant Peter Lee and co-author Allison Thornton, which stated that the association between parental smoking and SIDS could have been attributable to the failure to control fully for confounders. That first review has only been cited once, in the subsequent industry-funded review. In 1997, PM commissioned a consultant, Frank Sullivan, to write a review, with coauthor Susan Barlow, of all possible risk factors for SIDS. The first draft concluded that prenatal and postnatal smoking exposures are both independent risk factors for SIDS. After receiving comments and meeting with PM scientific executives, Sullivan changed his original conclusions on smoking and SIDS. The final draft was changed to emphasize the effects of prenatal maternal smoking and to conclude that postnatal SHS effects were "less well established." Changes in the draft to support this new conclusion included descriptions of Peter Lee's industry-funded review, a 1999 negative but underpowered study of SIDS risk and urinary cotinine levels, and criticisms of the conclusions of the National Cancer Institute report that SHS was causally associated with SIDS. In April 2001, the Sullivan review was published in the United Kingdom journal Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, with a disclosure statement that acknowledged financial support from PM but did not acknowledge contributions from PM exe
Descriptors
Causality, Conflict of Interest, Humans, Infant, Research Support as Topic, Review Literature as Topic, Risk Factors, Scientific Misconduct, Sudden Infant Death/etiology, Tobacco Industry/economics/ethics/legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution/adverse effects, Toxicology/ethics, United States, Biomedical and Behavioral Research, Empirical Approach
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Tong,E. K., England,L., Glantz,S. A.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Changing epidemiology of smoking: Barcelona, 2000-2001 2004 Agencia de Salut Publica de Barcelona. jrvillal@aspd.es
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Revista clinica espanola
Periodical, Abbrev.
Rev.Clin.Esp.
Pub Date Free Form
Jun
Volume
204
Issue
6
Start Page
312
Other Pages
316
Notes
LR: 20151119; JID: 8608576; ppublish
Place of Publication
Spain
ISSN/ISBN
0014-2565; 0014-2565
Accession Number
PMID: 15171893
Language
spa
SubFile
Comparative Study; English Abstract; Journal Article; IM
DOI
13062270 [pii]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
15171893
Abstract
CONTEXT: In recent years various initiatives of prevention and social changes have been carried out that should have an effect on epidemiology of smoking in our area. Their real effect is little known, however, because of methodological changes in the existing population surveys. In this work the data on smoking in the last city of Barcelona health survey (ESBA 2000-01) are analyzed, with reference to the cumulative information obtained along 18 years from the first survey in 1983. METHOD: ESBA 2000-01 is an interview health survey carried out on a weighted sample with 10,030 people. Data relative to tobacco use are showed for people 15-year-old or older included in the survey, stratified by age, sex, and class. Consumption context variables are also showed, and the tobacco consumption quitting among people who have smoked is analyzed. RESULTS: The proportion of daily smokers in the population over 14 years of age is 29 %, while that of former smokers is 21 % and 2.2 % in this population are occasional smokers. The prevalence is maximum in the 35-44 year-old group, and the prevalence is reduced drastically after this age. Stratified analysis by age, sex, and occupational category shows interesting differences among daily smokers. A strong gradient is observed according to occupational category in males. The situation is more complex in women. The typical smoker began when 17-year-old, and now consumes 16 cigarettes a day. Consumption is somewhat higher in males and is maximum in the 35-44 year-old group. Two-third of the smokers (65.7 %) want to quit smoking and more than one third (36 %) has attempted it along the last year. Almost half of smokers (48.1 %) have received advice to quit smoking from their physician. One of every four (24.9 %) smokers has been warned for smoking in some places. Almost half smokers are the only smoker in their home, and barely a third are the only smokers at work. The proportion of quitting increases with age in both sexes, and nowadays the differences in the probability of quitting smoking are few when the data are stratified by age groups. CONCLUSIONS: These results show the changing pattern of tobacco epidemiology in Barcelona: smoking is no longer the main behavior in no age and sex group, and the only social group in which more than half of its members smoke are 25-44 year-old not qualified worker males. This situation has occurred because of two processes: an important proportion of early quitting (demonstrated even in young adults) and a decrease in the beginning of the habit. Real differences are not observed between males and females with regard to the probability of quitting smoking. These data correct recent estimates that could be influenced by methodological changes in the instruments used.
Descriptors
Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Sex Distribution, Smoking/epidemiology/trends, Smoking Cessation, Socioeconomic Factors, Spain/epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Villalbi,J. R., Tomas,Z., Lopez,M. J., Rodriguez,M., Nebot,M.
Original/Translated Title
La cambiante epidemiologia del tabaquismo: Barcelona, 2000-2001
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Changing patterns of tobacco use in a middle-aged population: the role of snus, gender, age, and education 2011 Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Epidemiology and Global Health, Umea University, Sweden. margareta.norberg@epiph.umu.se
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Global health action
Periodical, Abbrev.
Glob.Health.Action
Pub Date Free Form
Volume
4
Issue
Start Page
10.3402/gha.v4i0.5613. Epub 2011 Jun 3
Other Pages
Notes
LR: 20150204; JID: 101496665; OID: NLM: PMC3118776; OTO: NOTNLM; 2010/09/10 [received]; 2011/03/21 [revised]; 2011/05/03 [accepted]; 2011/06/03 [epublish]; ppublish
Place of Publication
Sweden
ISSN/ISBN
1654-9880; 1654-9880
Accession Number
PMID: 21695071
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; IM
DOI
10.3402/gha.v4i0.5613 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
21695071
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Sweden, the smoking prevalence has declined. In 2007, it was among the lowest in the industrialized world. A steady increase in the use of Swedish oral moist snuff, snus, has occurred in parallel. This development is neither solicited by authorities nor the medical establishment, but rather has occurred along with increased awareness of the dangers of smoking, and has been promoted by product development and marketing of snus. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate time trends in patterns of tobacco use in northern Sweden during 1990-2007. DESIGN: Cross-sectional (99,381 subjects) and longitudinal (26,867 subjects) data from the Vasterbotten Intervention Programme (VIP) 1990-2007 were analyzed. All adults in Vasterbotten County are invited to a VIP health examination at ages 40, 50, and 60 years, and until 1995 also 30 years. Smoking and use of snus were evaluated by gender, age and educational groups. Intermittent smoking was categorized as smoking. RESULTS: From the period 1990-1995 to the period 2002-2007, smoking prevalence decreased from 26 to 16% among men and from 27 to 18% among women. The differences in prevalence increased between educational groups. The decline in smoking was less and the increase of snus use was greater among those with basic education. The use of snus among basic-educated 40-year-olds reached 35% among men and 14% among women during 2002-2007. Dual smoking and snus use increased among men and women with basic education. Smoking without snus use was more prevalent among women. Gender differences in total smoking prevalence (smoking only plus dual use) were small in all age groups, but increased among those with basic education reaching 7.3% during 2002-2007, with women being more frequent smokers. Smoking prevalences were similar among never, former and current snus users. Among the 30,000 former smokers, 38% of men and 64% of women had never used snus. Longitudinal data showed a decline in total tobacco use from baseline until follow-up and this was mainly due to a smoking cessation rate of
Descriptors
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Norberg,M., Lundqvist,G., Nilsson,M., Gilljam,H., Weinehall,L.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20110603
PMCID
PMC3118776
Editors
Characterisation and biochemical properties of predominant lactic acid bacteria from fermenting cassava for selection as starter cultures 2007 Federal Research Centre for Nutrition and Food, Institute of Hygiene and Toxicology, Haid-und Neu-Strasse 9, D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
International journal of food microbiology
Periodical, Abbrev.
Int.J.Food Microbiol.
Pub Date Free Form
20-Mar
Volume
114
Issue
3
Start Page
342
Other Pages
351
Notes
JID: 8412849; 0 (DNA, Ribosomal); 0 (RNA, Ribosomal, 16S); 2006/05/05 [received]; 2006/09/22 [revised]; 2006/09/30 [accepted]; 2006/12/26 [aheadofprint]; ppublish
Place of Publication
Netherlands
ISSN/ISBN
0168-1605; 0168-1605
Accession Number
PMID: 17188771
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; IM
DOI
S0168-1605(06)00577-0 [pii]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
17188771
Abstract
A total of 375 lactic acid bacteria were isolated from fermenting cassava in South Africa, Benin, Kenya and Germany, and were characterised by phenotypic and genotypic tests. These could be divided into five main groups comprising strains of facultatively heterofermentative rods, obligately heterofermentative rods, heterofermentative cocci, homofermentative cocci and obligately homofermentative rods, in decreasing order of predominance. Most of the facultatively heterofermentative rods were identified by phenotypic tests as presumptive Lactobacillus plantarum-group strains, which also comprised the most predominant bacteria (54.4% of strains) isolated in the study. The next predominant group of lactic acid bacteria (14.1% of total isolates) consisted of obligately heterofermentative rods belonging either to the genus Lactobacillus or Weissella, followed by the heterofermentative cocci (13.9% of isolates) belonging to the genera Weissella or Leuconostoc. Homofermentative cocci were also isolated (13.3% of isolates). Biochemical properties such as production of alpha-amylase, beta-glucosidase, tannase, antimicrobials (presumptive bacteriocin and H(2)O(2)-production), acidification and fermentation of the indigestible sugars raffinose and stachyose, were evaluated in vitro for selection of potential starter strains. A total of 32 strains with one or more desirable biochemical properties were pre-selected and identified using rep-PCR fingerprinting in combination with 16S rRNA sequencing of representative rep-PCR cluster isolates. Of these strains, 18 were identified as L. plantarum, four as Lactobacillus pentosus, two each as Leuconostoc fallax, Weissella paramesenteroides and Lactobacillus fermentum, one each as Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. mesenteroides and Weissella cibaria, while two remained unidentified but could be assigned to the L. plantarum-group. These strains were further investigated for clonal relationships, using RAPD-PCR with three primers, and of the 32 a total of 16 strains were finally selected for the development as starter cultures for Gari production.
Descriptors
DNA, Ribosomal/analysis, Fermentation, Food Microbiology, Genotype, Lactobacillus/classification/isolation & purification, Lactobacillus plantarum/classification/isolation & purification, Leuconostoc/classification/isolation & purification, Manihot/metabolism/microbiology, Molecular Sequence Data, Phenotype, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics, Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Technique
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Kostinek,M., Specht,I., Edward,V. A., Pinto,C., Egounlety,M., Sossa,C., Mbugua,S., Dortu,C., Thonart,P., Taljaard,L., Mengu,M., Franz,C. M., Holzapfel,W. H.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20061226
PMCID
Editors
Characterisation of prototype Nurmi cultures using culture-based microbiological techniques and PCR-DGGE 2006 Alltech Ireland, Sarney, Summerhill Road, Dunboyne, Co. Meath, Ireland. sinead.waters@teagasc.ie
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
International journal of food microbiology
Periodical, Abbrev.
Int.J.Food Microbiol.
Pub Date Free Form
1-Aug
Volume
110
Issue
3
Start Page
268
Other Pages
277
Notes
JID: 8412849; 0 (DNA, Bacterial); 0 (RNA, Ribosomal, 16S); 2005/09/13 [received]; 2006/02/09 [revised]; 2006/04/03 [accepted]; 2006/07/11 [aheadofprint]; ppublish
Place of Publication
Netherlands
ISSN/ISBN
0168-1605; 0168-1605
Accession Number
PMID: 16814892
Language
eng
SubFile
Journal Article; IM
DOI
S0168-1605(06)00257-1 [pii]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
16814892
Abstract
Undefined Nurmi-type cultures (NTCs) have been used successfully to prevent salmonella colonisation in poultry for decades. Such cultures are derived from the caecal contents of specific-pathogen-free birds and are administered via drinking water or spray application onto eggs in the hatchery. These cultures consist of many non-culturable and obligately anaerobic bacteria. Due to their undefined nature it is difficult to obtain approval from regulatory agencies to use these preparations as direct fed microbials for poultry. In this study, 10 batches of prototype NTCs were produced using an identical protocol over a period of 2 years. Traditional microbiological techniques and a molecular culture-independent methodology, polymerase chain reaction combined with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE), were applied to characterise these cultures and also to examine if the constituents of the NTCs were identical. Culture-dependent analysis of these cultures included plating on a variety of selective and semi-selective agars, examination of colony morphology, Gram-staining and a series of biochemical tests (API, BioMerieux, France). Two sets of PCR-DGGE studies were performed. These involved the amplification of universal and subsequently lactic acid bacteria (LAB)-specific hypervariable regions of a 16S rRNA gene by PCR. Resultant amplicons were subjected to DGGE. Sequence analysis was performed on subsequent bands present in resultant DGGE profiles using the Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST). Microbiological culturing techniques tended to isolate common probiotic bacterial species from the genera Lactobacillus, Lactococcus, Bifidobacterium, Enterococcus, Clostridium, Escherichia, Pediococcus and Enterobacterium as well as members of the genera, Actinomyces, Bacteroides, Propionibacterium, Capnocytophaga, Proteus, and Klebsiella. Bacteroides, Enterococcus, Escherichia, Brevibacterium, Klebsiella, Lactobacillus, Clostridium, Bacillus, Eubacterium, Serratia, Citrobacter, Enterobacter, Pectobacterium and Pantoea spp. in addition to unculturable bacteria were identified as constituents of the NTCs using universal PCR-DGGE analysis. A number of the sequences detected by LAB-specific PCR-DGGE were homologous to those of a number of Lactobacillus spp., including L. fermentum, L. pontis, L. crispatus, L. salivarius, L. casei, L. suntoryeus, L. vaginalis, L. gasseri, L. aviaries, L. johnsonii, L. acidophilus, and L. mucosae in addition to a range of unculturable lactobacilli. While NTCs are successful due to their complexity, the presence of members of Lactobacillus spp. amongst other probiotic genera, in these samples possibly lends to the success of the NTC cultures as probiotics or competitive exclusion products in poultry over the decades. PCR-DGGE proved to be an effective tool in detecting non-culturable organisms present in these complex undefined cultures. In conclusion, while the culture-dependent identification methods or PCR-DGGE alone cannot comprehensively elucidate the bacterial species present in such complex cultures, their complementarity provides useful information on the identity of the constituents of NTCs and will aid in future development of defined probiotics. Moreover, for the purpose of analysing prototype NTCs during their development, PCR-DGGE overcomes the limitations associated with conventional culturing methods including their low sensitivities, inability to detect unculturable bacteria and unknown species, very slow turnabout time and poor reproducibility. This study demonstrated that PCR-DGGE is indeed more valuable in detecting predominant microbial populations between various NTCs than as an identification methodology, being more applicable as a quality control method used to analyse for batch-to-batch variation during NTC production.
Descriptors
Animals, Bacteria/classification/genetics/isolation & purification, Bacteriological Techniques, Base Sequence, Cecum/microbiology, Chickens, Colony Count, Microbial, DNA, Bacterial/analysis, Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field/methods, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods, Probiotics, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Species Specificity, Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Waters,S. M., Murphy,R. A., Power,R. F.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20060711
PMCID
Editors
Characterisation of the bacterial community associated with early stages of great scallop (Pecten maximus), using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) 2003 Sandaa, R.-A., University of Bergen, Department of Microbiology, N-5020 Bergen, Norway
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Systematic and applied microbiology
Periodical, Abbrev.
Syst.Appl.Microbiol.
Pub Date Free Form
/
Volume
26
Issue
2
Start Page
302
Other Pages
311
Notes
Place of Publication
ISSN/ISBN
0723-2020
Accession Number
Language
SubFile
DOI
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
Abstract
Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) of PCR-amplified 16S rDNA was used to characterise and compare bacterial communities associated with scallop larvae (Pecten maximus), in different production units in a shellfish hatchery. Water and larvae samples were collected from three different aquaculture systems; stagnant, flow-through and a flow-through system with seawater treated with ozone. Samples were also collected from different algal cultures, inlet tanks and water pipes leading to the different aquaculture systems. Clear differences were seen between the bacterial community associated with the larvae and in the water from the different aquaculture systems. However, there were high similarities in the community composition between different water samples and between larvae samples collected at different time periods, indicating a high stability in the bacterial communities. Fifty three percent of the sequences from these samples were similar to 16S rRNA gene sequences of members of the γ-subclass of the Proteobacteria. The different algal cultures had different bacterial communities, however 73 percent of the sequences were similar to 16S rRNA gene sequences of members of the α-subclass of the Proteobacteria. Differences in the DGGE profiles were also seen between the samples taken from the inlet tanks and water pipes, indicating a change in the bacterial community composition as the water passed through the pipes. To our knowledge this is the first study investigating bacterial communities associated with Great Scallop larvae in different aquaculture systems including noncultured components.
Descriptors
DNA 16S, ozone, RNA 16S, sea water, aquaculture, article, bacterial flora, bacterial genetics, bacterium culture, bacterium identification, bacterium isolate, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, gene sequence, Gram negative bacterium, larva, nonhuman, nucleotide sequence, Pecten maximus, polymerase chain reaction, priority journal, scallop, shellfish, water sampling
Links
Book Title
Database
Embase; MEDLINE
Publisher
Data Source
Embase
Authors
Sandaa,R. -A, Magnesen,T., Torkildsen,L., Bergh,Ø.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
PMCID
Editors
Characterisation of urban inhalation exposures to benzene, formaldehyde and acetaldehyde in the European Union: comparison of measured and modelled exposure data 2008 Physical and Chemical Exposure Unit, Institute for Health and Consumer Protection, Joint Research Centre of the Commission of the European Communities, Via E. Fermi 1, T.P. 281, 21027 Ispra, VA, Italy.
Source Type
Print(0)
Ref Type
Journal Article
Periodical, Full
Environmental science and pollution research international
Periodical, Abbrev.
Environ.Sci.Pollut.Res.Int.
Pub Date Free Form
Jul
Volume
15
Issue
5
Start Page
417
Other Pages
430
Notes
LR: 20131121; JID: 9441769; 0 (Air Pollutants); 1HG84L3525 (Formaldehyde); GO1N1ZPR3B (Acetaldehyde); J64922108F (Benzene); 2007/08/29 [received]; 2008/04/21 [accepted]; 2008/05/20 [aheadofprint]; ppublish
Place of Publication
Germany
ISSN/ISBN
0944-1344; 0944-1344
Accession Number
PMID: 18491156
Language
eng
SubFile
Comparative Study; Journal Article; IM
DOI
10.1007/s11356-008-0013-4 [doi]
Output Language
Unknown(0)
PMID
18491156
Abstract
BACKGROUND, AIM AND SCOPE: All across Europe, people live and work in indoor environments. On average, people spend around 90% of their time indoors (homes, workplaces, cars and public transport means, etc.) and are exposed to a complex mixture of pollutants at concentration levels that are often several times higher than outdoors. These pollutants are emitted by different sources indoors and outdoors and include volatile organic compounds (VOCs), carbonyls (aldehydes and ketones) and other chemical substances often adsorbed on particles. Moreover, legal obligations opposed by legislations, such as the European Union's General Product Safety Directive (GPSD) and Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH), increasingly require detailed understanding of where and how chemical substances are used throughout their life-cycle and require better characterisation of their emissions and exposure. This information is essential to be able to control emissions from sources aiming at a reduction of adverse health effects. Scientifically sound human risk assessment procedures based on qualitative and quantitative human exposure information allows a better characterisation of population exposures to chemical substances. In this context, the current paper compares inhalation exposures to three health-based EU priority substances, i.e. benzene, formaldehyde and acetaldehyde. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Distributions of urban population inhalation exposures, indoor and outdoor concentrations were created on the basis of measured AIRMEX data in 12 European cities and compared to results from existing European population exposure studies published within the scientific literature. By pooling all EU city personal exposure, indoor and outdoor concentration means, representative EU city cumulative frequency distributions were created. Population exposures were modelled with a microenvironment model using the time spent and concentrations in four microenvironments, i.e. indoors at home and at work, outdoors at work and in transit, as input parameters. Pooled EU city inhalation exposures were compared to modelled population exposures. The contributions of these microenvironments to the total daily inhalation exposure of formaldehyde, benzene and acetaldehyde were estimated. Inhalation exposures were compared to the EU annual ambient benzene air quality guideline (5 microg/m3-to be met by 2010) and the recommended (based on the INDEX project) 30-min average formaldehyde limit value (30 microg/m3). RESULTS: Indoor inhalation exposure contributions are much higher compared to the outdoor or in-transit microenvironment contributions, accounting for almost 99% in the case of formaldehyde. The highest in-transit exposure contribution was found for benzene; 29.4% of the total inhalation exposure contribution. Comparing the pooled AIRMEX EU city inhalation exposures with the modelled exposures, benzene, formaldehyde and acetaldehyde exposures are 5.1, 17.3 and 11.8 microg/m3 vs. 5.1, 20.1 and 10.2 microg/m3, respectively. Together with the fact that a dominating fraction of time is spent indoors (>90%), the total inhalation exposure is mostly driven by the time spent indoors. DISCUSSION: The approach used in this paper faced three challenges concerning exposure and time-activity data, comparability and scarce or missing in-transit data inducing careful interpretation of the results. The results obtained by AIRMEX underline that many European urban populations are still exposed to elevated levels of benzene and formaldehyde in the inhaled air. It is still likely that the annual ambient benzene air quality guideline of 5 microg/m3 in the EU and recommended formaldehyde 30-min average limit value of 30 microg/m3 are exceeded by a substantial part of populations living in urban areas. Considering multimedia and multi-pathway exposure to acetaldehyde, the biggest exposure contribution was found to be related to dietary behaviou
Descriptors
Acetaldehyde/analysis, Air Pollutants/analysis, Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis, Benzene/analysis, Computer Simulation, European Union, Formaldehyde/analysis, Humans, Inhalation Exposure/analysis, Models, Chemical, Urban Population
Links
Book Title
Database
Publisher
Data Source
Authors
Bruinen de Bruin,Y., Koistinen,K., Kephalopoulos,S., Geiss,O., Tirendi,S., Kotzias,D.
Original/Translated Title
URL
Date of Electronic
20080520
PMCID
Editors