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Featured researches published by F. Sarto.


Mutation Research Letters | 1985

Aging and smoking increase the frequency of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCE) in man.

F. Sarto; M.C. Faccioli; I. Cominato; Angelo Gino Levis

The frequency of SCE was determined in lymphocytes of 88 healthy human subjects, not occupationally exposed to known genotoxic agents, who were uniformly distributed in several classes of age (from 16 to 70 years), including an equal number of smokers and non-smokers, and of males and females. Our results indicate that the frequency of SCE increases linearly with age and that smoking enhances the frequency of SCE independently of age and sex.


Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1992

Micronucleated cells in nasal mucosa of formaldehyde-exposed workers

Cinzia Ballarin; F. Sarto; Luciano Giacomelli; Giovanni Battista Bartolucci; Erminio Clonfero

The frequency of micronuclei (MN) and cytology of respiratory nasal mucosa cells were evaluated in 15 non-smokers exposed to formaldehyde in a plywood factory. Each subject was paired with a control matched for age and sex. Mean levels of exposure to formaldehyde ranged from about 0.1 mg/m3 in the sawmill and shearing-press departments to 0.39 mg/m3 in the warehouse area. There was a contemporary exposure to low levels of wood dust (inspirable mass ranged from 0.23 mg/m3 in the warehouse to 0.73 mg/m3 during sawing operations). Nasal respiratory cell samples were collected by an otorhinolaryngologist near the inner turbinate using a brush for endocervical cytology. After staining (Feulgen plus Fast Green and Papanicolaous method for MN analysis and cytology, respectively), about 6000 cells were screened for micronuclei and scored in parallel for cytology according to a histopathological scale. A higher frequency of micronucleated cells was observed in the exposed group than in the controls (0.90 +/- 0.47 vs. 0.25 +/- 0.22, Mann-Whitney U test: p less than 0.01). Cytological examination indicated chronic phlogosis in the nasal respiratory mucosa of plywood factory workers, with a high frequency of squamous metaplasia cells (mean score 2.3 +/- 0.5 vs. 1.6 +/- 0.5 in the control group, Mann-Whitney U test: p less than 0.01).


Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1984

Cytogenetic damage in workers exposed to ethylene oxide.

F. Sarto; I. Cominato; A.M. Pinton; P.G. Brovedani; C.M. Faccioli; Vera Bianchi; Angelo Gino Levis

Sister-chromatid exchanges (SECs) and chromosomal aberrations (CAs) were detected in the peripheral lymphocytes of 41 sanitary workers exposed to ethylene oxide (EO) in the sterilizing units of 8 hospitals in the Venice Region. The first group (19 workers) was exposed to 10.7 +/- 4.9 ppm EO, expressed as the time-weighted average concentration for an 8-h working day (TWA/8 h conc.), and the second group (22 workers) to 0.35 +/- 0.12 ppm. Each exposed worker was paired with a control of similar age and smoking habits. A highly significant (P less than 0.001) increase in the mean frequency of SCEs was found in the higher exposure group, 14 (74%) exposed subjects having significantly increased levels of SCEs compared to their matched controls. In the lower exposure group, the increase in mean frequency of SCEs was lower, though still significant (P less than 0.05): 7 (33%) exposed subjects had higher and 1 (5%) had a lower SCE level than the matched controls. From the first group, 10 subjects, 7 of whom had increased SCE levels, were reanalysed 12-18 months after their exposure had been lowered or interrupted: in only 2 of them the SCE level was significantly decreased. A statistically significant correlation between SCE frequency and level of EO exposure (TWA/8 h conc.), as well as a multiple correlation between SCE level and EO exposure, smoking and age were found. However, no interaction could be detected between EO exposure and smoking in the induction of SCEs. In controls, SCE frequency was correlated with smoking and age. In the higher exposure group, the number of both chromatid- and chromosome-type aberrations, independent of gaps, was significantly increased, whereas in the lower exposure group only the frequency of chromosome-type aberrations, excluding gaps, was statistically higher than in controls. The level of CAs remained to a great extent unchanged in the 10 subjects re-examined at a later stage after lowering or halting exposure. Taking the group as a whole, the frequency of cells with total CAs was found to be weakly (P = 0.05) correlated with EO exposure, and was not correlated with smoking, age or SCE frequency.


Mutation Research Letters | 1987

Variations of SCE frequencies in peripheral lymphocytes of ex-smokers

F. Sarto; L. Mustari; D. Mazzotti; R. Tomanin; Angelo Gino Levis

We measured SCE frequencies over a period of 8 months in 14 smokers who stopped smoking at the start of the study. In a first group of 10 subjects, who did not resume smoking during the period of cytogenetic follow-up, a lowering of SCE frequencies was already evident after 18 days and this became statistically significant after 78 days. SCE decrease was related to the logarithm of the period (in days) for which smoking was interrupted (r = 0.98; p less than 0.001). In a second group of 4 subjects, who at various times resumed smoking, the decrease of SCE followed the same pattern as in the first group during the period of nonsmoking, but SCE frequencies rose even higher once smoking was resumed. Our study indicates that the decrease of SCE in ex-smokers is rather rapid during the first 78 days after stopping smoking, and much slower from the 78th to the 233rd day.


Caryologia | 1980

Clastogenic Activity Of Hexavalent and Trivalent Chromium in Cultured Human Lymphocytes

F. Sarto; Angelo Gino Levis; Carla Paulon

SUMMARYHuman peripheral lymphocytes cultured in vitro for 72 h have been used to compare the cytotoxic and clastogenic activity of water soluble compounds containing hexavalent chromium (as sodium dichromate, Na2Cr2O7) or trivalent chromium (as chromium chloride, CrC13).In the cultures treated for the last 24 h with different concentrations of Na2Cr2O7 (from 0.1 up to 50 × 10−6M), a decrease of the mitotic index and an increase of the percentage of cells with chromosome aberrations are noticed, which are linearly correlated with the logarithm of increasing Cr (VI) concentrations. Chromatid type aberrations are always prevalent and their frequency increases with a strongly inclined regression slope, whereas chromosomal type aberrations increase more slowly with the increasing Cr (VI) concentrations.In the cultures treated for the last 24 h with different CrCl3 concentrations (from 10 up to 7500×l0−6M), no significant increase of chromosome aberrations is noticed, not even when the cells are exposed to subt...


Mutation Research Letters | 1990

The micronucleus assay in human exfoliated cells of the nose and mouth: application to occupational exposures to chromic acid and ethylene oxide

F. Sarto; R. Tomanin; L. Giacomelli; G. Iannini; A.R. Cupiraggi


Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health | 1991

STUDIES OF BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL MONITORING OF LOW-LEVEL EXPOSURE TO ETHYLENE-OXIDE

F. Sarto; Ma Tornqvist; R Tomanin; Giovanni Battista Bartolucci; Sm Ostermangolkar; L. Ehrenberg


Carcinogenesis | 1986

Mutagenic activity and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon levels in urine of humans exposed to therapeutical coal tar

Erminio Clonfero; Mauro Agostino Zordan; Danilo Cottica; Paola Venier; Luigi Pozzoli; E. L. Cardin; F. Sarto; Angelo Gino Levis


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1990

Chromosomal aberrations, sister chromatid exchanges, and urinary thioethers in nurses handling antineoplastic drugs

F. Sarto; Andrea Trevisan; Rosella Tomanin; Arianna Canova; Mario Fiorentino


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1987

Sister chromatid exchanges and DNA repair capability in sanitary workers exposed to ethylene oxide: Evaluation of the dose-effect relationship

F. Sarto; Erminio Clonfero; Giovanni Battista Bartolucci; Claudio Franceschi; Mariella Chiricolo; Angelo Gino Levis

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