Anna Axmon
Lund University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anna Axmon.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2001
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander; Ulf Strömberg; Eva Dyremark; Lars Hagmar
The purpose of this study was to assess the association between 2,2,4,4,5,5-hexachlorobiphenyl (CB-153) in plasma, a biomarker of exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB), and time to pregnancy (TTP) in a group of women with a varying dietary exposure to PCB. For 121 Swedish east coast fishermens wives (median year of birth 1956, range 1945-1968), information on self-reported TTP for the first planned pregnancy (median 2 mo, range 0-48) and CB-153 concentrations from blood samples drawn in 1995 (median 144 ng/g lipid, range 16-566) were available. Each womans CB-153 concentration in plasma at the time immediately preceding her pregnancy was estimated, taking into account reduction of body burden of CB-153 due to lactation, the yearly reduction of PCB in Baltic Sea fish, as well as the biological half-life of CB153. Based on the estimated CB-153 concentrations, subjects were categorized into tertiles as low (37-206 ng/g lipid), medium (207-330 ng/g lipid), and high (331-1036 ng/g lipid) exposure groups. TTP in the medium- and high-exposure groups were then compared to TTP in the low-exposure group by estimating the corresponding success rate (i.e., the number of pregnancies per person month) ratios (SuRR) using discrete Cox regression, taking into account essential confounders. No obvious association between estimated CB-153 concentration and TTP was observed (medium vs. low: SuRR 0.77 [95% CI 0.47-1.28] and high vs. low: SuRR 0.95 [0.74-1.23]). The present data give no support for a negative association between the plasma CB-153 concentrations observed in the present study and TTP. It should, however, be borne in mind that the study group was rather small and mainly included relatively young women, likely to have been only moderately exposed.
Environmental Health | 2008
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander
Cohorts comprising fishermens families on the east coast of Sweden have been found to have a high consumption of contaminated fish as well as high body burdens of persistent organochlorine pollutants (POPs). Their west coast correspondents are socio-economically similar, but with considerably lower POP exposure since the fish caught on the west coast is far less contaminated. The rationale for this was that the cohorts residing on the east coast of Sweden have been found to have a high consumption of contaminated fish as well as high body burdens of POPs, whereas their west coast correspondents are socio-economically similar, but with considerably lower POP exposure since the fish caught on the west coast is far less contaminated. Among the reproductive outcomes investigated are included both male and female parameters, as well as couple fertility and effects on the fetus. A range of exposure measures, including both questionnaire assessments of fish consumption and biomarkers, have been used.The most consistent findings of the studies are those related to the fetus, where a decreased birth weight was found across all measures of exposure, which is in agreement with studies from other populations. Some markers for male reproduction function, i.e. sperm motility, sperm chromatin integrity, and Y:X chromosome ratio, were associated with POP exposure, whereas others, such as sperm concentration and semen volume, were not. With respect to couple fertility and female reproductive parameters, no support was given for associations with POP exposure. Although some associations may have been affected by beneficial effects of essential nutrients in seafood, the overall findings are meaningful in the context of reproductive toxicity and support the usefulness of the epidemiological design.
Environmental Research | 2004
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander; Ulf Strömberg; Bo Jönsson; Peter Nilsson-Ehle; Lars Hagmar
Fertility and Sterility | 2005
Anna Axmon; Lars Hagmar
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health | 2002
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander; Ulf Strömberg; Lars Hagmar
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health | 2000
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander; Ulf Strömberg; Lars Hagmar
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2000
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander; Ulf Strömberg; Lars Hagmar
Chemosphere | 2004
Anna Axmon; Lars Rylander; Ulf Strömberg; Lars Hagmar
Environmental Research | 2006
Anna Axmon
Environmental Research | 2006
Anna Axmon