William R. Hartley
Tulane University
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Featured researches published by William R. Hartley.
Science of The Total Environment | 2003
Karen H. Watanabe; Frank W. Desimone; Arunthavarani Thiyagarajah; William R. Hartley; Albert E. Hindrichs
Between 1990 and 1994, samples of three shellfish species (i.e. blue crab, Callinectes sapidus;crayfish, Procambarus acutis; and river shrimp, Macrobrachium ohionii) and 16 fish species and were collected at six sites along the lower Mississippi River by the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, Office of Water Resources in coordination with the US Environmental Protection Agency. The fish species included: bigmouth buffalo (Ictiobus cyanellus); blue catfish (Ictalurus furcatus); carp (Cyprinus carpio); channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus); cobia (Rachycentron canadum); flathead catfish (Pylodictis olivaris); freshwater drum (Aplodinotus grunniens); largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides); long nose gar (Lepisosteus osseus); red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus); red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus); smallmouth buffalo (Ictiobus bubalus); spotted gar (Lepisosteus oculatus); striped bass (Morone saxatilis); white bass (Morone chrysops); and white crappie (Pomoxis annularis). Organic compound and heavy metal concentrations were measured in 161 composite fish tissue samples where each composite included three to 10 individual fish. Nineteen chemicals, found at measurable levels in sample tissues, were used in calculations of lifetime excess cancer and non-cancer risks due to fish consumption. We calculated: 574 chemical-specific cancer risks; 41 total cancer risks; and 697 margins of exposure based on a consumption rate of one 8-ounce meal per week (0.032 kg/day), a body weight of 70 kg and reported cancer potency factors and reference doses. We identified nine species of concern (blue catfish, carp, channel catfish, cobia, crayfish, flathead catfish, red drum, spotted gar and striped bass) based on total cancer risk greater than 10(-4) or margin of exposure greater than 1, and whether or not samples collected in subsequent years resulted in lower risks. The compounds primarily responsible for the elevated risks were aldrin, dieldrin, alpha-benzene hexachloride, gamma-benzene hexachloride, heptachlor epoxide, arsenic and mercury.
Environmental Health Perspectives | 2004
Frances J. Mather; LuAnn E. White; Elizabeth Cullen Langlois; Charles Shorter; Christopher M. Swalm; Jeffrey G. Shaffer; William R. Hartley
The Environmental Public Health Tracking Network (EPHTN) proposes to link environmental hazards and exposures to health outcomes. Statistical methods used in case–control and cohort studies to link health outcomes to individual exposure estimates are well developed. However, reliable exposure estimates for many contaminants are not available at the individual level. In these cases, exposure/hazard data are often aggregated over a geographic area, and ecologic models are used to relate health outcome and exposure/hazard. Ecologic models are not without limitations in interpretation. EPHTN data are characteristic of much information currently being collected—they are multivariate, with many predictors and response variables, often aggregated over geographic regions (small and large) and correlated in space and/or time. The methods to model trends in space and time, handle correlation structures in the data, estimate effects, test hypotheses, and predict future outcomes are relatively new and without extensive application in environmental public health. In this article we outline a tiered approach to data analysis for EPHTN and review the use of standard methods for relating exposure/hazards, disease mapping and clustering techniques, Bayesian approaches, Markov chain Monte Carlo methods for estimation of posterior parameters, and geostatistical methods. The advantages and limitations of these methods are discussed.
Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 2000
Linda K. Teuschler; Chris Gennings; William Stiteler; Richard C. Hertzberg; Joan Colman; Arunthavarani Thiyagarajah; John C. Lipscomb; William R. Hartley; Jane Ellen Simmons
Drinking water disinfection has effectively eliminated much of the morbidity and mortality associated with waterborne infectious diseases in the United States. Various disinfection processes, however, produce certain types and amounts of disinfection by-products (DBPs), including trihalomethanes (THM), haloacetic acids, haloacetonitriles, and bromate, among others. Human health risks from the ubiquitous exposure to complex mixtures of DBPs are of concern because existing epidemiologic and toxicologic studies suggest the existence of systemic or carcinogenic effects. Researchers from several organizations have developed a multiple-purpose design approach to this problem that combines efficient laboratory experimental designs with statistical models to provide data on critical research issues (e.g., estimation of human health risk from low-level DBP exposures, evaluation of additivity assumptions as useful for risk characterization, estimation of health risks from different drinking water treatment options). A series of THM experiments have been designed to study embryonic development, mortality and cancer in Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) and liver and kidney endpoints in female CD-1 mice. The studies are to provide dose-response data for specific mixtures of the 4 THMs, for the single chemicals, and for binary combinations. The dose-levels and mixing ratios for these experiments were selected to be useful for development and refinement of three different statistical methods: testing for departures from dose-additivity; development of an interactions-based hazard index; and use of proportional-response addition as a risk characterization method. Preliminary results suggest that dose-additivity is a reasonable risk assessment assumption for DBPs. The future of mixtures research will depend on such collaborative efforts that maximize the use of resources and focus on issues of high relevance to the risk assessment of human health.
Journal of Aquatic Animal Health | 2004
Wade Getsfrid; Arunthavarani Thiyagarajah; William R. Hartley; Octavia Conerly
Abstract We observed ovotestis in Japanese medaka Oryzias latipes used to study the effects of bromodichloromethane (BDCM) on gonadal differentiation. Bromodichloromethane, a trihalomethane, is a drinking water disinfection byproduct. Seven-day-old Japanese medaka (n = 30 fish per treatment) were exposed for 10 d to nominal concentrations of BDCM (10 or 25 mg/L) in dimethyl sulfoxide, a carrier solvent control, or a springwater control, then transferred to springwater and reared for 6 months. Ovotestis was present in one female of the 13 Japanese medaka that survived for 6 months after exposure to 10 mg/L BDCM. This is the first report of an intersex condition in a BDCM exposure study. There are no known reports of spontaneous occurrences of ovotestis in Japanese medaka; however, we cannot eliminate the possibility that this single case was spontaneous rather than induced by BDCM. Therefore, further studies with a wide range of concentrations of BDCM are needed to confirm the ovotestis induction potential...
Journal of Aquatic Animal Health | 1995
William R. Hartley; Arunthavarani Thiyagarajah; Merle Mizell
Abstract Diseases were monitored for 1 year in a cohort of approximately 560 Japanese medakas Oryzias latipes kept in a laboratory at Tulane University. The fish were maintained as part of a breeding colony for embryological studies. Eighty-six fish exhibiting disease or injury during the year were examined histopathologically. Two adult Japanese medakas (one male and one female) had ectopic hermaphroditic gonads in the cranial cavity. The ectopic gonads were bordered by meninges and cranium. The ectopic gonads in both cases consisted mostly of spermatocytes and spermatids with numerous islands of primary germ cells and a few ovarian follicles. An ectopic gonad in the cranial cavity has not been previously reported in vertebrates.
Marine Environmental Research | 2000
A. Thiyagarajah; M.B. Anderson; William R. Hartley
Gonadal cysts of spotted gar (Lepisosteus oculatus), an air-breathing teleost commonly found in Louisiana waters, are described. Fish were collected from two sites: Bayou Trepagnier, a petroleum-contaminated site (30 males and 42 females), and Bayou Traverse, a control site (17 males and 15 females). After fish were evaluated for gross abnormalities, they were necropsied and the gonads, gonadal ducts, and gonadal cysts were evaluated histologically. Multilocular fluid-filled cysts were noted in the testes, or spermatic ducts of four spotted gars from the Bayou Trepagnier. Unilateral ovarian cystadenomas were present in one female from Bayou Trepagnier. No cysts were observed in the gonads of spotted gar from the control site.
Environmental Research | 2007
Wen-Chao Ho; William R. Hartley; Leann Myers; Meng-Hung Lin; Yu-Sheng Lin; Chih-Hui Lien; Ruey-Shiung Lin
Chemosphere | 2005
Linda K. Teuschler; Chris Gennings; William R. Hartley; Hans Carter; Arunthavarani Thiyagarajah; Rita Schoeny; Chris Cubbison
Journal of The American Water Resources Association | 2000
James E. Bollinger; Laura J. Steinberg; Andrew J. Englande; James P. Crews; Janet M. Hughes; Cruz Velasco; Karen H. Watanabe; William R. Hartley; Christopher M. Swalm; Jeffrey M. Mendler; Lu Ann E. White; William J. George
Environmental Progress | 1997
Janet E. Preslan; Boumediene Belkhouche; Christopher M. Swalm; Janet M. Hughes; Hsiao Lin Chen; Melanie M. Henry; Daryl Lin; Reda M. Bakeer; Andrew J. Englande; Irina Demtchouk; Mary Bitner Anderson; James L. Regens; Jay C. Means; James E. Bollinger; Laura J. Steinberg; Ronaldo Luna; Raul Hernandez; William R. Hartley; William J. George