Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where V. L. Spate is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by V. L. Spate.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1998

The study of human nails as an intake monitor for arsenic using neutron activation analysis

T. A. Nichols; J. S. Morris; M. M. Mason; V. L. Spate; C. K. Baskett; T. P. Cheng; C. J. Tharp; J. A. Scott; T. L. Horsman; J. W. Colbert; A. E. Rawson; M. R. Karagas; V. Stannard

Arsenic is toxic to humans with the lethal dose being approximately 1 mg/kg/day. At much lower long-term exposures, arsenic is hypothesized to increase the risk of certain cancers. We have developed an irradiation position for the neutron activation analysis (NAA) of nail specimens for arsenic, in support of a case-control study involving New Hampshire residents consuming well water above the EPA Safe Drinking Water Standard of 0.050 ppm. Arsenic is bound to nail keratin through sulfhydryl groups proportional to intake providing a convenient means of integrating arsenic intake in population-based studies. Our objective was to develop the necessary facilities and procedures by which relatively small samples (i.e. 20 to 100 mg) could be accurately analyzed for arsenic, so that affordable nutritional epidemiology investigations, requiring large numbers of samples (>1000 in this case), could be undertaken. A high-flux reflector position, with minimal axial variation throughout the fuel cycle, suitable for pneumatic-tube irradiations, was characterized by measurement of the neutron flux distribution (thermal and epithermal) within the irradiation capsule over time. Results from application of the method to a case-control study of basal and squamous cell skin cancer will be presented.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1995

Determination of iodine in urine, using epithermal instrumental neutron activation analysis (EINAA), at the University of Missouri Research Reactor (MURR)

M. M. Mason; V. L. Spate; J. S. Morris; C. K. Baskett; T. P. Cheng; C. L. Reams; Loic Le Marchand; B. E. Henderson; Laurence N. Kolonel

There is currently great interest in iodine as a micro nutrient. Both high and low intakes have been associated with thyroid cancer incidence. Development of dietary iodine monitors is needed to supplement the use of dietary recall methods which have not been well validated for iodine. In this study, 30 pooled urine samples, from ethnic groups on various islands in the South Pacific, were analyzed for iodine using epithermal instrumental neutron activation analysis (EINAA).


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1994

Determination of fluoride in human nails via cyclic instrumental neutron activation analysis

V. L. Spate; J. S. Morris; C. K. Baskett; M. M. Mason; C. L. Reams; David J. Hunter; Walter C. Willett

The role of fluorine in human health has become somewhat controversial. It is widely accepted as protective against dental caries, may be protective against osteoporosis, and has been very conservatively implicated with osteosarcoma in male rats. In this study, we repot on the development of a neutron activation analysis method and its application to the analysis of human nails. We have found that toenails collected in population-based epidemiology studies apparently reflect fluoride intake.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2008

Effect of dietary selenium on the promotion of hepatocarcinogenesis by 3,3', 4,4'-tetrachlorobiphenyl and 2,2', 4,4', 5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyl.

Divinia N. Stemm; Job C. Tharappel; Hans-Joachim Lehmler; Cidambi Srinivasan; J. Steven Morris; V. L. Spate; Larry W. Robertson; Brett T. Spear; Howard P. Glauert

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent organic pollutants that have promoting activity in the liver. PCBs induce oxidative stress, which may influence carcinogenesis. Epidemiological studies strongly suggest an inverse relationship between dietary selenium (Se) and cancer. Despite evidence linking Se deficiency to hepatocellular carcinoma and liver necrosis, the underlying mechanisms for Se cancer protection in the liver remain to be determined. We examined the effect of dietary Se on the tumor promoting activities of two PCBs congeners, 3,3′, 4,4′-tetrachlorobiphenyl (PCB-77) and 2,2′, 4,4′, 5,5′-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB-153) using a 2-stage carcinogenesis model. An AIN-93 torula yeast-based purified diet containing 0.02 (deficient), 0.2 (adequate), or 2.0 mg (supplemental) selenium/kg diet was fed to Sprague-Dawley female rats starting ten days after administering a single dose of diethylnitrosamine (150 mg/kg). After being fed the selenium diets for 3 weeks, rats received four i.p. injections of either PCB-77 or PCB-153 (150 μ mol/kg) administered every 14 days. The number of placental glutathione S-transferase (PGST)-positive foci per cm3 and per liver among the PCB-77–treated rats was increased as the Se dietary level increased. Unlike PCB-77, rats receiving PCB-153 did not show the same Se dose-response effect; nevertheless, Se supplementation did not confer protection against foci development. However, the 2.0 ppm Se diet reduced the mean focal volume, indicating a possible protective effect by inhibiting progression of preneoplastic lesions into larger foci. Cell proliferation was not inhibited by Se in the liver of the PCB-treated groups. Se did not prevent the PCB-77–induced decrease of hepatic Se and associated reduction in glutathione peroxidase (GPx) activity. In contrast, thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) activity was not affected by the PCBs treatment or by Se supplementation. These findings indicate that Se does not inhibit the number of PGST-positive foci induced during promotion by PCBs, but that the size of the lesions may be inhibited. The effects of Se on altered hepatic foci do not correlate with its effects on GPx and TrxR.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1998

Longitudinal study of iodine in toenails following IV administration of an iodine-containing contrast agent

V. L. Spate; J. S. Morris; T. A. Nichols; C. K. Baskett; M. M. Mason; T. L. Horsman; P. L. Horn-Ross; A. C. Shiau; I. R. McDougall

The literature on the relationship between diet and thyroid cancer (TC) risk and the higher incidence of TC among Asian immigrants to the US compared to second and third generation subgroups has prompted epidemiologists to hypothesize that increased levels of iodine consumption may be associated with TC risk, particularly among persons with a history of clinical or subclinical thyroid dysfunction. At the University of Missouri Research Reactor (MURR), we have applied epiboron neutron activation analysis to investigate human nails as a dietary monitor for iodine. Preliminary studies have indicated a positive correlation between dietary iodine intake and the concentration of iodine in toenails. However, these studies are confounded by high iodine levels (up to 30 ppm) in approximately 5% of the nails studied. We hypothesize that, in the subjects we have studied, the high iodine levels may be due to iodine-containing medications, in particular contrast-agents containing iopamidol. This paper will report on longitudinal studies using contrast agent subjects who were followed-up for almost two years compared to a longitudinal control and a population mean. Based on this study, we suggest that iodine-containing contrast agents contaminate nail samples via non-specific binding in the short term followed by incorporation in the nail as a result of absorption.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1998

Comparison of whole blood, plasma and nails as monitors for the dietary intake of selenium

M. M. Mason; J. S. Morris; V. L. Spate; C. K. Baskett; T. A. Nichols; T. L. Horsman; Loic Le Marchand; L N Kolonel; S. Yukimoto

The measurement of dietary selenium intake in a free-living population using dietary recall techniques has been shown to be spurious. Consequently, in our laboratory, we have focused on the development of biologic monitors such as blood, nails, hair and urine. In this paper, we report on the neutron activation analysis of whole blood, plasma and nail specimens collected from 285 Caucasian subjects, all permanent residents of Hawaii, participating in a malignant melanoma trial. Correlations between monitors are presented and discussed in the context of selenium determinants and integration of selenium intake.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1995

Study of the correlation of trace elements in caprenters' toenails

T. P. Cheng; J. S. Morris; S.R. Koirtyohann; V. L. Spate; C. K. Baskett

Toenail samples were collected from 129 carpenters (average age 47). The bone and blood lead data for these carpenters have shown a broad range of lead-level exposure in this population. A total of 28 elements were measured in the sample set by a combination of instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) methods. Of the elements measured, only Co, Cr, Fe, Na, Cd, Cu, F, and Ni were significantly correlated with lead. A statistical treatment of the overall data set, including principal component analysis, was further applied in an attempt to correlate the elements in the samples.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1995

Determination of iodine in human nails via epithermal neutron activation analysis

V. L. Spate; J. S. Morris; S. Chickos; C. K. Baskett; M. M. Mason; T. P. Cheng; C. L. Reams; C. West; C. Furnee; Walter C. Willett; P. L. Horn-Ross

An epithermal instrumental neutron activation analysis (EINAA) method, using a boron nitride irradiation capsule compatible with use in the University of Missouri Research Reactor pneumatic-tube irradiation facility, has been developed for the analysis of iodine in human nails. The principal objective was to determine if the nail could be used as a means of monitoring dietary intake of iodine. The EINAA method was used to analyze nails from subjects having iodine intakes that could be qualitatively differentiated. Iodine concentrations in nails from these subjects were positively correlated with apparent iodine intake.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1998

Longitudinal study of iodine in market milk and infant formula via epiboron neutron activation analysis

T. A. Nichols; J. S. Morris; V. L. Spate; C. J. Tharp; C. K. Baskett; T. L. Horsman; M. M. Mason; T. P. Cheng

Iodine is an essential nutrient in the human diet. Its primary role is expressed as a component of thyroxine (T4) and the corresponding deiodinated triiodothyronine (T3) hormones produced by the thyroid as part of the system that regulates growth, mental development and metabolism. The recommended daily allowance (RDA) for iodine ranges from 50 μg/day for infants to 150 μg/day for adults. Reports over the last 15 years have indicated that the U.S. diet provides 2 to 7 times the iodine RDA and that dairy products typically provide 20 to 60 percent of the dietary iodine intake. Measurements of iodine in dietary components and composites reported in FDA studies have been done calorimetrically. These studies have, according to the authors, both under reports (by up to −50%) and over reports (by up to +80%) the iodine, depending on food type, compared to a radiochemical NAA reference method. Milk is typically under reported by −20%. The objective of this study was to utilize epiboron neutron activation analysis (EBNAA) to study the iodine concentrations, and seasonal variations of iodine, and market milk and infant formula, collected 15 years apart, in comparison with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) market-basket reports.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1995

Investigation of the appearance of supplemental enriched Se-76 using the human nail as a dietary monitor

C. K. Baskett; V. L. Spate; J. S. Morris; H. D. Anderson; M. M. Mason; C. L. Reams; T. P. Cheng; Kurt R. Zinn; G. M. Hill; R. P. Dowdy

The principal objective of this study was to determine if the use of a stable enriched tracer of Se-76 could be used to determine the delay time between a dietary intake of selenium and its appearance in fingernails and toenails. Selenium is an essential trace element in human nutrition. It has been studied at the Missouri University Research Reactor (MURR) for the past 15 years using an Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA) technique. The principal route of human exposure to selenium is through the diet. Selenium concentrations of nails, blood, hair, and urine have been used as indicators of dietary selenium intake. In this study, a cohort consisting of seven men and five women ingested three selenium supplements of 150 μg each over a three day period. The selenium was enriched in Se-76 (96.48%) and ingested as selenite in orange juice following an overnight fast. Fingernails and toenails were collected prior to the selenium supplementation and for several months afterward to be used as biochemical indicators. The peak76Se concentration in the fingernails and toenails occurred at 19–23 and 16–32 weeks after supplementation, respectively.

Collaboration


Dive into the V. L. Spate's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. M. Mason

University of Missouri

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T. P. Cheng

University of Missouri

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. L. Reams

University of Missouri

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge