Sergio Fuselli
Istituto Superiore di Sanità
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Featured researches published by Sergio Fuselli.
Chemosphere | 2009
Luigi Turrio-Baldassarri; Silvia Alivernini; Sergio Carasi; Marialuisa Casella; Sergio Fuselli; Nicola Iacovella; Anna Laura Iamiceli; Cinzia La Rocca; Carmelo Scarcella; Chiara Laura Battistelli
In Brescia a PCB production plant polluted soil and forage of the surrounding fields and caused a significant contamination of meat and milk of the cattle fed with local forage. This in turn induced elevated blood levels of PCDDs, PCDFs and PCBs in the consumers. The contamination levels and profiles measured in the perirenal fat, in the liver and in the milk of the overall 28 contaminated bovines are reported. TEQ levels varied from 30 to 81 pg WHO(2005)-TEQ g(-1) (38-103 pg WHO(1997)-TEQ) for perirenal fat, from 107 to 138 pg WHO(2005)-TEQ g(-1) fat (128-168 pg WHO(1997)-TEQ) for liver and from 45 to 50 pg WHO(2005)-TEQg(-1) fat (56-65pg WHO(1997)-TEQ) for milk; all these values are roughly tenfold higher than the European limits. Non-ortho dioxin-like (dl)PCBs are by far the largest contributors to TEQ and PCDF contribution also largely prevail over PCDDs; both these features are also present in both the contaminated forages and in the serum of consumers of contaminated food. The indicator PCB levels are in the following ranges: 226-664 ng g(-1) for perirenal fat; 929-1822 ng g(-1) fat for liver; 183-477 ng g(-1) fat for milk; their level is about 100 times higher than the regional background. The liver samples displayed an overall TEQ several times higher than the perirenal fat from either the same animal or the same pool of animals; the increase in liver concentration was significantly higher for PCDD and PCDF congeners than for dlPCBs, and it was maximum for OCCD.
Science of The Total Environment | 1997
Silvano Monarca; Riccardo Crebelli; Donatella Feretti; Alberto Zanardini; Sergio Fuselli; L. Filini; S. Resola; P.G. Bonardelli; Giuseppe Nardi
This research was designed to examine the presence of mutagenic/carcinogenic compounds in urban airborne particulate matter in relation to particles aerodynamic size. Inhalable (< 10 microns) airborne particulate (PM-10) was collected at a low traffic site in an industrialized Northern Italian town, using a high volume sampler equipped with a cascade impactor for particles fractionation. The organic extracts of different fractions were examined for mutagenicity in Salmonella typhimurium strains TA98 and TA98/1,8-DNP6 using the microsuspension procedure, and for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) content by gas chromatography. Size fractionated particles were also analysed for heavy metals (Fe, Mn, Zn, Pb, Cu, Cd, Cr, Ni, V) using plasma spectrophotometry. The results of mutagenicity and chemical analyses indicate that, at the site investigated, inhalable particulate was largely made of fine (< 0.5 micron) particles, which accounted for most of PAHs and mutagenicity. A similar pattern of distribution was found for heavy metals, which were relatively more abundant in small (< 1.5 microns) particles compared to coarser ones.
Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1991
Riccardo Crebelli; Sergio Fuselli; G. Conti; L. Conti; A. Carere
The mutagenicity spectra of the organic extracts of both airborne particulate matter and diesel and gasoline soot particles were determined using a battery of 9 bacterial strains of different genetic specificity. The assays with crude extracts and with fractionated acidic, neutral and basic components revealed striking differences in the patterns of mutagenic responses produced by each of the complex mixtures investigated. The mutagenicity of air particulate matter was shown to depend mainly on direct-acting acidic and neutral compounds, with a lesser contribution of basic promutagens which required exogenous metabolic activation by liver S9. The assays with a diesel soot extract indicated the prevailing contribution of direct-acting acidic and neutral compounds, and suggested an important role also for nitro derivatives other than nitropyrenes. The gasoline exhaust was characterized by powerful promutagenic compounds, belonging to either the acidic, neutral or basic fractions. The implications of these results are discussed with respect to the contribution of engine exhausts to air pollution, and the possible use of mutagenicity spectra in the analysis of environmental complex mixtures.
International Journal of Environmental Health Research | 1995
Riccardo Crebelli; Sergio Fuselli; Luigi Turrio Baldassarri; Giovanni Ziemacki; A. Carere; Romualdo Benigni
The mutagenicity of airborne particulate matter was monitored at a site representative of the high traffic density of the city of Rome. Inhalable (less than 10 μm) particles were collected every other day with a high‐volume sampler from November 1990 to April 1991. Mutagenicity of particle extracts was evaluated by the microsuspension procedure with Salmonella typhimurium strain TA98. Mutagenic activities of particle extracts displayed a fourfold variation during the period of sampling, with the lowest values in April (about 600 induced revertants mg‐1), and the highest in February (about 2500 revertants mg‐1). Multivariate statistical analyses on the interrelationships between mutagenicity, micropollutants levels and meteorological parameters highlighted a close inverse relationship between air mutagenicity and ambient temperature. Lower temperatures determined both an increased content of organic matter on air particles, and an increased mutagenicity (on a weight basis) of particle extracts, which was a...
Atmospheric Environment | 1982
Sergio Fuselli; Giorgio Benedetti; Renato Mastrangeli
A method is described for trapping and analysing airborne methylamines (MMA, DMA and TMA) by means of a 2035 mesh activated charcoal traps and subsequent GLSC analysis of collected sample using 0.1 N NaOH acqueous solution. The method described may be applied to monitoring methylamines in air in industrial areas, with an Alkali Flame Detector; sensitivities of approx. 0.005 ppmv for each of the three methylamines analysed are reached. Trapping efficiency is compared with that of Tenax GC 6080 mesh and 6080 Carbopack B which uses thermal desorption of air samples before GLSC analysis. The Tenax GC trap method enables TMA recovery only with a sensitivity of 0.0001 ppmv. Recovery obtained with 6080 Carbopack B traps is practically zero.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2010
Sergio Fuselli; Marco De Felice; Roberta Morlino; Luigi Turrio-Baldassarri
Fourteen volatile organic compounds (VOCs)—twelve hydrocarbons and two organochlorine compounds—were monitored both outdoors and indoors for three years at one site in Rome. Results showed that 118 out of 168 indoor seasonal mean values were higher than the corresponding outdoor concentrations. The most relevant source of outdoor hydrocarbons was automotive exhaust emissions. Due to the enforcement of various measures to protect health and the environment, outdoor levels of monoaromatic hydrocarbons decreased about ten fold over 15 years, and aliphatic hydrocarbons also decreased. With the decrease in these outdoor concentrations, indoor air sources are likely to be more relevant for indoor air exposures. Winter outdoor values for monoaromatic hydrocarbons were generally markedly higher than the summer ones. The gradual replacement of the current fleet of circulating cars with new cars complying with EURO 5 standards, further reducing hydrocarbon emissions, may possibly lead to an increase in the observed indoor/outdoor ratios. It is indeed more difficult to remove indoor sources, some of which are still unknown.
Mutation Research\/genetic Toxicology | 1991
Riccardo Crebelli; L. Conti; Sergio Fuselli; Paola Leopardi; Andrea Zijno; A. Carere
The comutagenic effect exerted by cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) was investigated. In vitro experiments with Salmonella typhimurium strains TA98 and TA98/1.8DNP6 indicated that CSC specifically enhances the mutagenicity of polyaromatic amines such as 2-aminofluorene, 2-acetylaminofluorene, 4-acetylaminofluorene and 2-aminoanthracene. The pattern of comutagenicity of CSC was shown to differ from that of norharman, a tobacco-related known comutagenic substance. Both black and blond tobacco CSCs proved to interact synergistically with 2-aminoanthracene mutagenicity. Chemical fractionation of CSC indicates the occurrence of comutagenic substance(s) in both neutral and basic components. Further in vitro experiments with 2-acetylaminofluorene metabolites and derivatives suggest that the comutagenic effect of CSC could involve later step(s) in the metabolic activation of fluorenylamines, i.e., the conversion of hydroxylamines into ultimate reactive species. The possible occurrence of a synergistic interaction of CSC with chemical mutagens in vivo was evaluated. Administration of 2-aminoanthracene/CSC mixtures, previously shown to be comutagenic in vitro, failed to demonstrate a synergistic effect in SCE induction in bone marrow cells of mice. This apparent discrepancy may rely on divergences in the activation pathways of polycyclic amines in vitro and in vivo.
International Journal of Environmental Health Research | 1995
Sergio Fuselli; Romualdo Benigni; L. Conti; A. Carere; Riccardo Crebelli
The concentrations of four volatile organic compounds (VOCs: benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes) and the levels of inhalable (< 10 μm) airborne particles were monitored during 1 year at a site with intense vehicular traffic in the city of Rome. VOCs as well as airborne particulate matter were sampled every alternate day and pooled in fortnightly samples representative of the first and second half of each month. Some meteorological parameters (mean temperature, heliophany, air pressure and relative humidity) were concurrently recorded. Air particulate extracts were tested for mutagenicity in the Salmonella reversion system with tester strain TA98. Air mutagenicity levels were compared to air concentrations of benzene and alkylbenzenes, putative indicators of vehicular traffic, in order to elucidate their interrelationships. The results of multivariate statistical analyses show that seasonal variations in air mutagenicity are mainly dependent on the increased content of organic matter in airborne pa...
European Journal of Public Health | 2014
Rosastella Principe; Gregorino Paone; Salvatore Damante; Sergio Fuselli; Patrizio Palermo; Laura De Marchis; Simonetta Massafra; Piergiorgio Zuccaro
Smoking in hospitals is banned in most of European countries; nevertheless, implementing a total smoking ban is particularly difficult and policy breaches are frequent. Aim of our study was to monitor the compliance with the smoke-free policy within a hospital district by measuring particulate matters (PM2.5). We designed an observational study and identified six sensitive locations within the hospitals: surgical units, administrative offices, hall, outdoor main entrances and as controls an outdoor and an indoor area. To rule out potential confounders we included in the evaluation the roadways surrounding the hospital district. PM2.5 median concentrations observed in outdoor main entrances and in hall were significantly higher (16.4 and 13.4 µg m(-3)), as compared with the other settings (P < 0.0001). This data warrant an implementation of current policies to protect patients, visitors and employees from passive second-hand smoke leading to a smoking prohibition in any hospital surroundings.
International Journal of Environmental Health Research | 2011
Anna Santarsiero; Sergio Fuselli; Roberta Morlino; Gianluca Minniti; Marco De Felice; Emanuela Ortolani
The paper deals with a multidimensional approach demonstrating a direct link between the entity of ongoing dentistry activity (number and kind of interventions) and specific pollution components. Simultaneously indoor/outdoor air concentrations of a set of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and activity variables, describing the amount and nature of ongoing dentistry activities, were monitored over a year at a dental hospital located in an urban area. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was used to single out mutually orthogonal pollution components which were then correlated to “pathology” factors arising from the analysis of dentistry activity indexes. The use of a multidimensional perspective allowed us to obtain a statistically significant model of the link between level of pollution and dentistry activity. In particular, the correlation approach linking pollution results to pathological variables allows us to establish a causative link even in the presence of sub-threshold concentrations of pollutants.