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Featured researches published by H. Kenneth Hudnell.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1992

Exposure of humans to a volatile organic mixture. I. Behavioral assessment

U.S. David A. Otto Ph.D.; H. Kenneth Hudnell; Dennis E. House; Lars Mølhave; Wayne Counts

Exposure to a low-level mixture of volatile organic compounds, typical of those found in new buildings, has been reported to impair neurobehavioral function in persons who have experienced sick building syndrome (SBS). Sixty-six healthy young males who had no history of chemical sensitivity were exposed for 2.75 h to a complex mixture of volatile organic compounds at 0 and 25 mg/m3. Even though subjects reported more fatigue and more mental confusion following exposure to volatile organic compounds than to clean air, performance on 13 neurobehavioral tests was not affected. Practice or learning effects were observed if administration of many behavioral tests were repeated. Further studies are needed to clarify the relationship of exposure to volatile organic chemicals, neurobehavioral performance, and subject characteristics, e.g., age, gender, and chemical sensitivity.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2001

Human visual function in the North Carolina clinical study on possible estuary-associated syndrome.

H. Kenneth Hudnell; Dennis E. House; Judy Schmid; Deborah Koltai; Woodhall Stopford; Jean Wilkins; David A. Savitz; Marian Swinker; Stanley Music

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency assisted the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services in conducting a study to investigate the potential for an association between fish kills in the North Carolina estuary system and the risk for persistent health effects. Impetus for the study was recent evidence suggesting that estuarine dinoflagellates, including members of the toxic Pfiesteria complex (TPC), P. piscicida and P. schumwayae, may release a toxin(s) that kills fish and adversely affects human health. This report describes one component of the study in which visual system function was assessed. Participants working primarily in estuaries inhabited by TPC or in offshore waters thought not to contain TPC were studied. The potentially exposed estuary (n = 22) and unexposed offshore (n = 20) workers were matched for age, gender, and education. Visual acuity did not differ significantly between the cohorts, but visual contrast sensitivity (VCS), an indicator of visual pattern-detection ability for stimuli of various sizes, was significantly reduced by about 30% in the estuary relative to the offshore cohort. A further analysis that excluded participants having a history possibly predictive of neuropsychological impairment showed a similar VCS reduction. Additional analyses indicated that differences between the cohorts in age, education, smoking, alcohol consumption, and total time spent on any water did not account for the difference in VCS. Exploratory analyses suggested a possible association between the magnitude of VCS reduction and hours spent in contact with a fish kill. The profile of VCS deficit across stimulus sizes resembled that seen in organic solvent-exposed workers, but an assessment of occupational solvent, and other neurotoxicant, exposures did not indicate differences between the cohorts. These results suggest that factor(s) associated with the North Carolina estuaries, including the possibility of exposure to TPC toxin(s), may impair visual system function.


Neurobehavioral Methods and Effects in Occupational and Environmental Health | 1994

The Use of Visual and Chemosensory Evoked Potentials in Environmental and Occupational Health12

David A. Otto; H. Kenneth Hudnell

The application of visual (VEP) and chemosensory evoked potentials (CSEP) in occupational and environmental health is briefly reviewed. VEPs have been used extensively in experimental neurotoxicology and play an increasingly important role in human neurotoxicity testing. The similarity of VEP waveforms in different species renders them useful for cross-species extrapolation. CSEPs, used in conjunction with traditional psychophysical tests and rating scales, offer a promising new approach to the study of indoor air pollution.


Archive | 1992

Exposure of humans to a volatile organic mixture

H. Kenneth Hudnell; David A. Otto; Elizabeth House; Lars Mølhave


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2002

Apartment Residents' and Day Care Workers' Exposures to Tetrachloroethylene and Deficits in Visual Contrast Sensitivity

Judith S. Schreiber; H. Kenneth Hudnell; Andrew M. Geller; Dennis E. House; Kenneth M. Aldous; Michael S. Force; Karyn Langguth; Elizabeth J. Prohonic; Jean C. Parker


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2002

Increased ERG a- and b-wave amplitudes in 7- to 10-year-old children resulting from prenatal lead exposure.

Stephen J. Rothenberg; Lourdes Schnaas; Manuel Salgado-Valladares; Esther Casanueva; Andrew M. Geller; H. Kenneth Hudnell; Donald A. Fox


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2003

Neuropsychologic Testing versus Visual Contrast Sensitivity: Response

H. Kenneth Hudnell; Ritchie C. Shoemaker


Archive | 2003

Methods for treating or inhibiting sick building syndrome, post-lyme disease syndrome, and/or chronic fatigue syndrome

Ritchie C. Shoemaker; H. Kenneth Hudnell


Microbes and Infection | 2003

A letter of comment on “Human health effects of exposure to Pfiesteria piscicida: a review” by Swinker and colleagues

H. Kenneth Hudnell; Ritchie C. Shoemaker


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2003

Neuropsychologic Testing versus Visual Contrast Sensitivity: Response. (Correspondence)

H. Kenneth Hudnell; Ritchie C. Shoemaker

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Andrew M. Geller

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Elizabeth J. Prohonic

New York State Department of Health

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Jean C. Parker

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Judith S. Schreiber

New York State Department of Health

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