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Dive into the research topics where Edward F. Fitzgerald is active.

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Featured researches published by Edward F. Fitzgerald.


Epidemiology | 2000

Parental consumption of contaminated sport fish from Lake Ontario and predicted fecundability.

Germaine M. Buck; John E. Vena; Enrique F. Schisterman; Jacek Dmochowski; Pauline Mendola; Lowell E. Sever; Edward F. Fitzgerald; Paul J. Kostyniak; Hebe Greizerstein; James R. Olson

Wildlife studies suggest that consumption of contaminated fish from the Great Lakes may expose humans to polychlorinated biphenyls and persistent chlorinated pesticides. To assess whether time to pregnancy or fecundability is affected, we conducted a telephone survey in 1993 with female members of the New York State Angler Cohort Study who were considering pregnancy between 1991 and 1994 (N = 2,445). Among the 1,234 (50%) women who became pregnant, 895 (73%) had a known time to pregnancy. Upon enrollment into the cohort in 1991, both partners reported duration and frequency of Lake Ontario sport fish consumption. We estimated lifetime exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls from recent consumption and used a discrete-time analog of Cox proportional hazards analysis to estimate conditional fecundability ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for fish consumption among couples with complete exposure data who discontinued birth control to become pregnant (N = 575). Maternal consumption of fish for 3-6 years was associated with reduced fecundability (fecundability ratio = 0.75; 95% CI = 0.59-0.91), as was more than a monthly fish meal in 1991 (fecundability ratio = 0.73; 95% CI = 0.54-0.98). Our findings suggest that maternal but not paternal consumption of contaminated fish may reduce fecundability among couples attempting pregnancy.


Journal of Asthma | 1999

Asthma hospitalization rates and socioeconomic status in New York State (1987-1993).

Shao Lin; Edward F. Fitzgerald; Syni-An Hwang; Jean Pierre Munsie; Alice D. Stark

This study examined the geographic distribution of asthma hospitalizations in New York State (NYS) and its association with socioeconomic status. Statewide asthma hospitalization data (1987-1993) were merged with 1990 census data by residential zip code. The asthma hospitalization rate increased in NYS from 1987 (2.54 per 1000) through 1993 (2.87 per 1000) and the increase is largely attributable to increases for children 4 years old and younger. The risk factors for asthma admission varied in different areas. However, rates of hospitalization because of asthma were generally higher in the zip codes areas with higher proportions of poverty, unemployment, poorly educated residents, African-Americans, and Hispanics.


Environmental Research | 2004

Fish consumption and other environmental exposures and their associations with serum PCB concentrations among Mohawk women at Akwesasne.

Edward F. Fitzgerald; Syni-An Hwang; Karyn Langguth; Michael R. Cayo; Bao-Zhu Yang; Brian Bush; Priscilla Worswick; Trudy Lauzon

A study was conducted with the objective of assessing how dietary, occupational, and residential exposures to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) contribute to body burden among pregnant Mohawk women residing near three hazardous waste sites. From 1992 to 1995, 111 pregnant women were interviewed about fish consumption and other environmental risk factors and donated a 20-mL venous blood sample for serum PCB analysis. To supplement previous fish sampling, samples of residential soil, ambient air, wild duck, and local meats and vegetables were also collected and analyzed for PCBs. The results indicated a significant decline in local fish consumption from an annual mean of 31.3 meals more than 1 year prior to pregnancy to an annualized mean of 11.7 meals during pregnancy. This change was reportedly a result of the advisories issued against consumption of local fish by pregnant and nursing women of childbearing age. The geometric mean concentration of total PCBs in the serum was 1.2 ppb, a level that is similar to that in other studies of women with no unusual exposures to PCBs. However, multiple regression analysis revealed that serum levels of total PCBs and three individual congeners were associated with local fish consumption. The PCB levels in soil, air, and local foodstuffs other than fish generally were not elevated, except for those obtained in close proximity to one of the hazardous waste sites, and no association was found between serum PCB levels and exposure through these media or through occupation.


Toxicology and Industrial Health | 1996

The New York Angler Cohort Study: Exposure Characterization and Reproductive and Developmental Health

John E. Vena; Germaine M. Buck; Paul J. Kostyniak; Pauline Mendola; Edward F. Fitzgerald; Lowell E. Sever; Jo Freudenheim; Hebe Greizerstein; Maria Zielezny; James H. McReynolds; James R. Olson

The New York State Angler Study will evaluate the association between past and current consumption of contaminated fish from Lake Ontario and both short- and long-term health effects in a population-based cohort. It will measure fish consumption and reproductive and developmental health among 10,518 male anglers and 6,651 of their wives or partners, as well as among 913 female anglers. To characterize exposure among subgroups of the cohort, further analytical methods were developed and implemented to measure specific polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) congeners, methylmercury, and other substances in biological samples. Exposure assessment has been completed for a stratified random sample of 321 anglers. In addition, analyses for 79 congeners of PCBs are complete for 177 anglers. A special study of duck andturtle consumers currently is underway. Telephone interviews have been completed with 2,454 of the 2,999 women who planned a pregnancy between 1991 and 1994. The entire cohort of male anglers, partners of male anglers, and female anglers has been submitted for matching with the New York State live birth and fetal death registries to obtain lifetime reproductive histories. A medical record abstraction study will assess perinatal and developmental outcomes among the 3,442 births that occurred between 1986 and 1991. Finally, a study of breast milk from currently lactating women is underway, and 215 breast milk samples have been collected from the planned pregnancy subcohort. Progress on each of the study components is discussed herein.


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1994

Mono-Ortho- and Non-Ortho-Substituted Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Human Milk from Mohawk and Control Women: Effects of Maternal Factors and Previous Lactation

Chia-Swee Hong; Ju Xiao; A.C. Casey; Brian Bush; Edward F. Fitzgerald; S.A. Hwang

Fifty-four individual human milk samples from 50 mothers (20 Mohawks and 30 controls) were analyzed for four non-ortho- and eight mono-ortho-substituted polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Mean total coplanar PCBs concentrations were 49 ng/g and 55 ng/g lipid for Mohawk and control women, respectively. A statistical evaluation of all analytical data reveals no significant difference of total coplanar PCB level between Mohawk and control women. The level of these contaminants is influenced by the age of the mother, number of breastfed children, and length of nursing period. Older women, primiparae, and cigarette smokers had higher levels of coplanar PCBs. In general, women had higher levels of coplanar PCBs in the first lactation and in the earlier samples of a given lactation, while levels declined both with duration of breast-feeding and with number of children nursed.The contribution of individual non-ortho- and mono-ortho-substituted PCB congeners to the total calculated toxic equivalent values (ΣTEQ) was assessed for the breast milk samples. The levels of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs) in human milk of pooled specimens from Los Angeles, California and Binghamton, New York, widely separate cities in the United States (Schecter et al. 1989), were presented for reference purpose. The main contributions to the ΣTEQ were PCB congeners #118 (25.8 pg/g lipid), #126 (25 pg/g lipid), #105 (10.8 pg/g lipid), and #156 (7.4 pg/g lipid). Collectively, these compounds accounted for 70% of the ΣTEQ values. Based on the TEFs proposed by Safe (1990), the overall TEQs calculated for the monitored PCBs, were about five times those due to total PCDD/Fs.


Chemosphere | 1992

Isolation and determination of mono-ortho and non-ortho substituted PCBs (coplanar PCBs) in human milk by HPLC porous graphitic carbon and GC/ECD

Chia-Swee Hong; Brian Bush; Ju Xiao; Edward F. Fitzgerald

Abstract A rapid and simple liquid-chromatographic method for the isolation of mono-ortho and non-ortho substituted PCBs from human milk by using porous graphitic carbon is described. The separation takes less than 10 min. This method permits the determination of these PCB residues in human milk at parts-per-trillion levels.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1990

A retrospective cohort study of cancer incidence among New York State Farm Bureau members.

Alice D. Stark; Hwa-Gan Chang; Edward F. Fitzgerald; Karen Riccardi; Robert R. Stone

Cancer incidence from 1973 through 1983 in 18,811 New York Farm Bureau members was examined using a retrospective cohort study design. The observed number of cancers for all age groups was 72% of the expected, and the major deficits in incidence occurred for lung (52% of expected), gastrointestinal (67% of expected), and bladder (78% of expected). Similar deficits have been reported by other researchers. Unlike other studies, we did not find a significant excess of cancer of any site. Given the healthy worker effect and the small numbers of incident tumors at some sites, the Standardized Cancer Incidence Ratios that were over 100 in value (i.e., lip, melanoma of the skin, prostate, multiple myeloma) merit further investigation. This study differs from previous research in population, setting, and method. Nonetheless, the general pattern of results is consistent with the findings of other investigations.


Environmental Health | 2003

Maternal fish consumption and infant birth size and gestation: New York State Angler Cohort Study.

Germaine M. Buck; Grace P Tee; Edward F. Fitzgerald; John E. Vena; John M. Weiner; Mya Swanson; Michael E. Msall

BackgroundThe scientific literature poses a perplexing dilemma for pregnant women with respect to the consumption of fish from natural bodies of water. On one hand, fish is a good source of protein, low in fat and a rich source of other nutrients all of which have presumably beneficial effects on developing embryos and fetuses. On the other hand, consumption of fish contaminated with environmental toxicants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) has been associated with decrements in gestation and birth size.Methods2,716 infants born between 1986–1991 to participants of the New York State Angler Cohort Study were studied with respect to duration of maternal consumption of contaminated fish from Lake Ontario and its tributaries and gestation and birth size. Hospital delivery records (maternal and newborn) were obtained for 92% of infants for the ascertainment of gestation (weeks), birth size (weight, length, chest, and head circumference) and other known determinants of fetal growth (i.e., maternal parity, history of placental infarction, uterine bleeding, pregnancy loss or cigarette smoking and infants race, sex and presence of birth defect). Duration of maternal fish consumption prior to the index infants birth was categorized as: none; 1–2, 3–7, 8+ years, while birth weight (in grams), birth length (in centimeters), and head and chest circumference (in centimeters) were left as continuous variables in multiple linear regression models. Birth size percentiles, ponderal indices and head to chest circumference ratios were computed to further assess proportionality and birth size in relation to gestational age.ResultsAnalysis of variance failed to identify significant mean differences in gestation or any measure of birth size in relation to duration of maternal lifetime fish consumption. Multiple linear regressions identified gestational age, male sex, number of daily cigarettes, parity and placental infarction, as significant determinants of birth size.ConclusionsThe results support the absence of an adverse relation between Lake Ontario fish consumption and reduced birth size as measured by weight, length and head circumference. Biological determinants and maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy remain important determinants of birth size.


Archives of Environmental Health | 2004

Childhood Asthma Hospitalizations and Ambient Air Sulfur Dioxide Concentrations in Bronx County, New York

Shao Lin; Syni-An Hwang; Cristian Pantea; Christine Kielb; Edward F. Fitzgerald

The association between asthma hospitalizations and ambient sulfur dioxide (SO2) concentrations was examined in a case-control study in Bronx County, New York. Cases comprised 2629 children aged 0-14 yr who were admitted to hospitals for asthma. There were 2236 controls who were admitted for reasons other than asthma. Daily ambient SO2 concentrations were categorized into quartiles of both average and maximum levels and various exposure windows (i.e., day of admission and 1-, 2-, and 3-d lags). Cases were exposed to higher daily average concentrations of SO2 than controls. The authors compared the highest exposure quartile with the lowest, and the odds ratios were 1.66, 1.90, 2.05, and 2.21 (all p0.01 for same-day, 1-, 2-, and 3-d lags, respectively), with a similar finding for daily SO2 maximum exposure. The results suggest a consistent positive association between SO2 exposure and hospitalizations for childhood asthma.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1991

Exposure to asbestiform minerals and radiographic chest abnormalities in a talc mining region of upstate New York

Edward F. Fitzgerald; Alice D. Stark; Nicholas Vianna; Syni-An Hwang

A radiologist in New York reported a high prevalence of pulmonary fibrosis in St. Lawrence and Jefferson counties. The New York State Department of Health responded by conducting a case history study of radiographic abnormalities found in the lung parenchyma and pleura of residents in Lawrence and Jefferson counties, where tremolitic talc has been mined for many years. During a 1-y period, all radiographs from 6 hospitals in the region were reviewed. A B-reader confirmed that 355 of 9,442 patients who were at least 40 y of age (3.8%) had a relevant abnormality; 60% of them reported occupational exposure to asbestiform minerals, and another 15% had a chest condition or injury that could have accounted for the abnormal radiograph. The results should be interpreted cautiously, but there was no evidence of widespread radiographic abnormalities resulting from ambient dust exposure. The data, however, support earlier studies that indicate that talc miners and millers experience excess parenchymal fibrosis and pleural changes. The data also suggest that individuals in the paper industry and construction trades may be at risk.

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Syni-An Hwang

New York State Department of Health

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Alice D. Stark

New York State Department of Health

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John E. Vena

Medical University of South Carolina

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Lowell E. Sever

Battelle Memorial Institute

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Pauline Mendola

National Institutes of Health

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Brian Bush

New York State Department of Health

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