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Featured researches published by William S. Beckett.


Chest | 2008

Diagnosis and Management of Work-Related Asthma: American College of Chest Physicians Consensus Statement

Susan M. Tarlo; John R. Balmes; Ronald Balkissoon; Jeremy Beach; William S. Beckett; David I. Bernstein; Paul D. Blanc; Stuart M. Brooks; Clayton T. Cowl; Feroza Daroowalla; Philip Harber; Catherine Lemière; Gary M. Liss; Karin A. Pacheco; Carrie A. Redlich; Brian H. Rowe; Julia Heitzer

BACKGROUND A previous American College of Chest Physicians Consensus Statement on asthma in the workplace was published in 1995. The current Consensus Statement updates the previous one based on additional research that has been published since then, including findings relevant to preventive measures and work-exacerbated asthma (WEA). METHODS A panel of experts, including allergists, pulmonologists, and occupational medicine physicians, was convened to develop this Consensus Document on the diagnosis and management of work-related asthma (WRA), based in part on a systematic review, that was performed by the University of Alberta/Capital Health Evidence-Based Practice and was supplemented by additional published studies to 2007. RESULTS The Consensus Document defined WRA to include occupational asthma (ie, asthma induced by sensitizer or irritant work exposures) and WEA (ie, preexisting or concurrent asthma worsened by work factors). The Consensus Document focuses on the diagnosis and management of WRA (including diagnostic tests, and work and compensation issues), as well as preventive measures. WRA should be considered in all individuals with new-onset or worsening asthma, and a careful occupational history should be obtained. Diagnostic tests such as serial peak flow recordings, methacholine challenge tests, immunologic tests, and specific inhalation challenge tests (if available), can increase diagnostic certainty. Since the prognosis is better with early diagnosis and appropriate intervention, effective preventive measures for other workers with exposure should be addressed. CONCLUSIONS The substantial prevalence of WRA supports consideration of the diagnosis in all who present with new-onset or worsening asthma, followed by appropriate investigations and intervention including consideration of other exposed workers.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2003

Asthma symptoms, severity, and drug therapy: a prospective study of effects on 2205 pregnancies.

Michael B. Bracken; Elizabeth W. Triche; Kathleen Belanger; Audrey F. Saftlas; William S. Beckett; Brian P. Leaderer

OBJECTIVE To prospectively examine in pregnant women whether asthma or asthma therapy influenced preterm delivery, intrauterine grown restriction (IUGR), or birthweight. METHODS We enrolled 873 pregnant women with a history of asthma, of whom 778 experienced asthma symptoms or took medication, and 1333 women with no asthma history, including 884 women with neither asthma diagnosis nor symptoms and 449 with symptoms but no diagnosis. Asthma symptoms, medication, and severity were classified according to 2002 Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines. RESULTS Preterm delivery was not associated with asthma diagnosis, severity, or symptoms but was associated with use of controller medications, independent of symptoms, specifically oral steroids and theophylline. Gestation was reduced by 2.22 weeks in women using oral steroids daily (P =.001) and 1.11 weeks after theophylline (P =.002). We observed a 24% (5-47%) increased risk for IUGR with each increased symptom step, which increased further in symptomatic women with no asthma diagnosis (31%, 4-65%) compared with women with neither asthma nor symptoms. CONCLUSIONS We found no effect of asthma symptoms or severity on preterm delivery but observed increased risks associated with use of oral steroid and theophylline. Intrauterine growth restriction was associated with asthma severity, which possibly reflects a hypoxic fetal effect. Women with asthma symptoms but no diagnosis were at particular risk of undermedication and delivering IUGR infants. These observations support guidelines that advocate active management of pregnant patients with mild or moderate asthma with beta(2) agonists, with oral steroids added only if severity increases. Symptomatic patients without an asthma diagnosis might need to be equally managed.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1997

Metal Fume Fever : Characterization of Clinical and Plasma IL-6 Responses in Controlled Human Exposures to Zinc Oxide Fume at and Below the Threshold Limit Value

Jonathan M. Fine; Terry Gordon; Lung Chi Chen; Patrick Kinney; Gary Falcone; William S. Beckett

Results from animal and preliminary human exposure studies have called into question whether the 5 mg/m3 8-hour time-weighted average threshold limit value (TLV) for zinc oxide fume is sufficient to protect workers against metal fume fever. The objectives of this study were to determine the clinical effects of exposures to low concentrations of zinc oxide and to ascertain whether these exposures elevated circulating levels of specific cytokines, which could account for the symptoms of the metal fume fever syndrome. Thirteen resting naive subjects inhaled, on separate days, air and 2.5 and 5 mg/m3 of furnace-generated zinc oxide fume for 2 hours. Subjects recorded symptoms and temperature and had blood drawn before and after each exposure. The mean (+/- SE) maximum rise in oral temperature at 6 to 12 hours after exposure was 1.4 +/- 0.3 degrees F after 5 mg/m3, compared with 0.6 +/- 0.5 degrees F after air exposure (P < 0.05). Mean temperature was also elevated after exposure to 2.5 mg/m3 zinc oxide (1.2 +/- 0.3 degrees F). In a parallel fashion, plasma levels of interleukin 6 (IL-6), a pyrogen, were significantly elevated after exposure to 5 mg/m3 zinc oxide. Mean IL-6 values (pg/mL) at pre-exposure and at 3 and 6 hours post-exposure were 1.9 (+/- 0.6), 2.8 (+/- 0.7), and 2.9 (+/- 0.6), respectively, on the air day and 1.6 (+/- 0.6), 4.4 (+/- 1.2), and 6.4 (+/- 1.1) on the 5 mg/m3 zinc oxide day. Zinc oxide exposure did not significantly affect plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor. Total symptom scores peaked 9 hours after the 5 mg/m3 zinc oxide exposure. Myalgias, cough, and fatigue were the predominant symptoms reported. Inhalation of zinc oxide for 2 hours at the current TLV of 5 mg/m3 produces fever and symptoms along with elevation in plasma IL-6 levels.


Thorax | 2008

Association between asthma and serum adiponectin concentration in women.

Akshay Sood; Xichun Cui; Clifford Qualls; William S. Beckett; Myron D. Gross; Michael W. Steffes; Lewis J. Smith; David R. Jacobs

Background: The association of murine asthma with adiposity may be mediated by adiponectin, an anti-inflammatory adipokine with reduced serum concentrations in obese subjects. A study was undertaken to examine whether the serum adiponectin concentration is associated with human asthma and whether it explains the association between adiposity and asthma, particularly in women and in premenopausal women. Methods: A cross-sectional analysis was performed of 2890 eligible subjects at year 15 of the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) cohort and its YALTA ancillary study who had either current asthma or never asthma at that evaluation. Obesity was defined as body mass index (BMI) ⩾30 kg/m2. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed with current asthma status as the dependent variable. Results: Women, but not men, with current asthma had a lower mean unadjusted serum adiponectin concentration than those with never asthma (p<0.001; p for sex interaction <0.001). Similarly, current asthma was related to obesity only in women (OR 3.31, 95% CI 2.00 to 5.46, p for sex interaction = 0.004); this association was little affected by adjusting for serum adiponectin. The prevalence of current asthma in premenopausal women was reduced in the highest compared with the lowest tertile of serum adiponectin concentration (OR 0.46, 95% CI 0.26 to 0.84, p = 0.03), after adjusting for BMI. However, the interaction between serum adiponectin concentration and BMI category on current asthma status was not significant in premenopausal women or women overall. Conclusions: A high serum adiponectin concentration may protect against current asthma in premenopausal women but does not explain the association between asthma and adiposity.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1988

Liver Disease Associated with Occupational Exposure to the Solvent Dimethylformamide

Carrie A. Redlich; William S. Beckett; Judy Sparer; Kenneth W. Barwick; Caroline A. Riely; Heidi Miller; Stephen L. Sigal; Stuart L. Shalat; Mark R. Cullen

STUDY OBJECTIVE to characterize an outbreak of liver disease among workers in a fabric coating factory; and to determine the outbreaks cause and natural history and strategies for clinical recognition, treatment, and prevention. DESIGN clinical-epidemiological investigation. SETTING academic medical center, Occupational Medicine Clinic, and worksite. PATIENTS fifty-eight of sixty-six workers participated in the study. All had standard liver function tests at least once. Forty-six workers completed a questionnaire; 27 had more extensive clinical evaluation for recognized liver abnormalities. RESULTS a plant-wide outbreak of liver disease was recognized after a new employee presented with signs and symptoms of hepatitis. Evaluation of the worksite showed that dimethylformamide, a widely used industrial solvent and known hepatotoxin, was being used to coat fabric in poorly ventilated areas without appropriate skin protection. No other major hepatotoxic exposure was identified. Overall, 36 of 58 (62%) workers tested had elevations of either aspartate aminotransferase (AST) or alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels. Enzyme abnormalities occurred almost exclusively in production workers (35 of 46 were abnormal), whereas only 1 of 12 nonproduction workers showed any elevations in enzyme levels (P less than 0.0001). Serologic tests excluded known infectious causes of hepatitis in all but 2 workers and changes characteristic of toxic liver injury were confirmed by histologic examinations of biopsy specimens from 4 workers. The ratio of AST to ALT levels was one or less in all but 1 worker. After modification of work practices and removal of workers most severely affected from exposure, improvement in liver enzyme abnormalities and symptoms in most patients were seen, although some patients showed persistent elevations of enzyme levels. CONCLUSIONS an outbreak of toxic liver disease has been associated with exposure to dimethylformamide in the workplace. The diagnosis of toxic liver disease was established by the clinical histories, negative viral serologies, an enzyme pattern of ALT levels being greater than AST levels, epidemiologic data on coworkers, and liver biopsy specimens. The high prevalence of unsuspected liver enzyme abnormalities in these workers suggests that occupational liver disease may occur more frequently than is generally recognized.


Environmental Research | 2009

Association of pediatric asthma severity with exposure to common household dust allergens.

Janneane F. Gent; Kathleen Belanger; Elizabeth W. Triche; Michael B. Bracken; William S. Beckett; Brian P. Leaderer

BACKGROUND Reducing exposure to household dust inhalant allergens has been proposed as one strategy to reduce asthma. OBJECTIVE To examine the dose-response relationships and health impact of five common household dust allergens on disease severity, quantified using both symptom frequency and medication use, in atopic and non-atopic asthmatic children. METHODS Asthmatic children (N=300) aged 4-12 years were followed for 1 year. Household dust samples from two indoor locations were analyzed for allergens including dust mite (Der p 1, Der f 1), cat (Fel d 1), dog (Can f 1), cockroach (Bla g 1). Daily symptoms and medication use were collected in monthly telephone interviews. Annual disease severity was examined in models including allergens, specific IgE sensitivity and adjusted for age, gender, atopy, ethnicity, and mothers education. RESULTS Der p 1 house dust mite allergen concentration of 2.0 microg/g or more from the main room and the childs bed was related to increased asthma severity independent of allergic status (respectively, OR 2.93, 95% CI 1.37, 6.30 for 2.0-10.0 microg/g and OR 2.55 95% CI 1.13, 5.73 for 10.0 microg/g). Higher pet allergen levels were associated with greater asthma severity, but only for those sensitized (cat OR 2.41 95% CI 1.19, 4.89; dog OR 2.06 95% CI 1.01, 4.22). CONCLUSION Higher levels of Der p 1 and pet allergens were associated with asthma severity, but Der p 1 remained an independent risk factor after accounting for pet allergens and regardless of Der p 1 specific IgE status.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2000

Hearing Conservation for Farmers: Source Apportionment of Occupational and Environmental Factors Contributing to Hearing Loss

William S. Beckett; Diane Chamberlain; Eric M. Hallman; John J. May; Syni An Hwang; Marta I. Gomez; Shirley Eberly; Christopher Cox; Alice D. Stark

Those who work on farms continue to have a strikingly high prevalence of hearing loss, despite efforts to promote hearing conservation in agriculture. To develop improved hearing conservation programs, we performed a source apportionment analysis for hearing loss in a large, multiphasic health survey, the New York Farm Family Health and Hazard Survey. We used information from audiometric, otoscopic, and tympanometric examinations; detailed general health and farm exposure interviews; and a second interview that focused on additional potential determinants of hearing loss. Hearing loss on audiometry was significantly associated with increased age, male gender, education through high school or less, lifetime years of hunting with guns, lifetime years of use of a grain dryer, and a history of spraying crops during the previous year. Hearing conservation programs for farmers should thus be directed toward reduction in noise exposure, both from occupational and non-occupational sources. Additional study is needed to evaluate the association seen between crop spraying and hearing loss.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2012

Are Ambient Ultrafine, Accumulation Mode, and Fine Particles Associated with Adverse Cardiac Responses in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Rehabilitation?

David Q. Rich; Wojciech Zareba; William S. Beckett; Philip K. Hopke; David Oakes; Mark W. Frampton; John D. Bisognano; David C. Chalupa; Jan Bausch; Karen O'Shea; Yungang Wang; Mark J. Utell

Background: Mechanisms underlying previously reported air pollution and cardiovascular (CV) morbidity associations remain poorly understood. Objectives: We examined associations between markers of pathways thought to underlie these air pollution and CV associations and ambient particle concentrations in postinfarction patients. Methods: We studied 76 patients, from June 2006 to November 2009, who participated in a 10-week cardiac rehabilitation program following a recent (within 3 months) myocardial infarction or unstable angina. Ambient ultrafine particle (UFP; 10–100 nm), accumulation mode particle (AMP; 100–500 nm), and fine particle concentrations (PM2.5; ≤ 2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter) were monitored continuously. Continuous Holter electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings were made before and during supervised, graded, twice weekly, exercise sessions. A venous blood sample was collected and blood pressure was measured before sessions. Results: Using mixed effects models, we observed adverse changes in rMSSD [square root of the mean of the sum of the squared differences between adjacent normal-to-normal (NN) intervals], SDNN (standard deviation of all NN beat intervals), TpTe (time from peak to end of T-wave), heart rate turbulence, systolic and diastolic blood pressures, C-reactive protein, and fibrinogen associated with interquartile range increases in UFP, AMP, and PM2.5 at 1 or more lag times within the previous 5 days. Exposures were not associated with MeanNN, heart-rate–corrected QT interval duration (QTc), deceleration capacity, and white blood cell count was not associated with UFP, AMP, and PM2.5 at any lag time. Conclusions: In cardiac rehabilitation patients, particles were associated with subclinical decreases in parasympathetic modulation, prolongation of late repolarization duration, increased blood pressure, and systemic inflammation. It is possible that such changes could increase the risk of CV events in this susceptible population.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1996

Airway reactivity in welders : A controlled prospective cohort study

William S. Beckett; Patricia E. Pace; Steven J. Sferlazza; Gary D. Perlman; Alice Hm Chen; Xi Ping Xu

In a 3-year survey, respiratory symptoms, spirometry, and methacholine reactivity were measured annually in welders (n = 51) and non-welder controls subjects (n = 54) to determine whether welding-related symptoms are associated with accelerated decline in lung function or changes in airway reactivity. In the cross-workshift study, maximal midexpiratory flow rate declined reversibly during a welding day, whereas 1-second forced expiratory volume and forced-vital capacity were unchanged. In the longitudinal study, the welders had significantly more reversible work-related symptoms of cough, phlegm, wheeze, and chest tightness than the non-welder shipyard control subjects. In this group of actively working welders, across-workshift changes in midflow and reversible symptoms were related to the welding occupation, but evidence for chronic irreversible effects on spirometry or airway reactivity was not seen over the 3 years of observation. The short period of observation was not optimal for detecting a chronic effect on lung function. Work practices and engineering controls may be successfully preventing irreversible respiratory effects, but not mild reversible effects, in this group of welders.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2005

Low-level ozone exposure and respiratory symptoms in infants.

Elizabeth W. Triche; Janneane F. Gent; Theodore R. Holford; Kathleen Belanger; Michael B. Bracken; William S. Beckett; Luke P. Naeher; Jean-ellen McSharry; Brian P. Leaderer

Objective Recent studies indicate that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ozone standards may not protect sensitive individuals. In this study we examined respiratory effects of ozone in infants who may be vulnerable, particularly if they are children of asthmatic mothers. Design Women delivering babies at one of five hospitals in southwestern Virginia between 1994 and 1996 were invited to participate in a cohort study; 780 women enrolled. Ambient air quality data (ozone and particulate matter) were collected at a central monitoring site. Participants This analysis is of 691 infants followed for approximately 83 days between 10 June and 31 August 1995 and/or 1996; they contributed a total of 52,421 infant-days of follow-up. Mothers were interviewed at enrollment and approximately biweekly to report infants’ daily symptoms. Repeated measures logistic regression models were run separately for wheeze, difficulty breathing, and cough. Ozone metrics included 24-hr average, peak 1-hr, and maximum 8-hr average. Analyses were repeated for the 61 infants whose mothers had asthma. Results For every interquartile-range increase in same-day 24-hr average ozone, likelihood of wheeze increased 37% [95% confidence interval (CI), 2–84%]. Among infants of asthmatic mothers, same-day 24-hr average ozone increased likelihood of wheeze 59% (95% CI, 1–154%) and of difficulty breathing 83% (95% CI, 42–136%). Maximum 8-hr ozone and peak 1-hr ozone were associated with difficulty breathing, but not wheeze, in infants of asthmatic mothers. Ozone was not associated with cough. Conclusions At levels of ozone exposure near or below current U.S. EPA standards, infants are at increased risk of respiratory symptoms, particularly infants whose mothers have physician-diagnosed asthma.

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Akshay Sood

University of New Mexico

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