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Found 9976 publications. Showing page 172 of 400:

Publication  
Year  
Category

HENVINET. Review of decision support tools, recommendations. NILU OR

Negrente, E.; Liu, H.-Y.; Neofytou, P.; Bartonova, A.

2010

HENVINET. Second annual review of research and best practice. NILU OR

Yang, A.; Bartonova, A. (eds.)

The aim of this report is to present an overview of the framework for assessment of knowledge quality and identification of knowledge gaps within the HENVINET project. The focus is on four priority health end points as defined in the European Health Action Plan (EHAP); asthma and allergies, cancer, neurodevelopmental disorders and endocrine disruptors. This report is structured into two parts, where Part A introduces the HENVINET methodology, and Part B gives an example of how it is implemented through the different steps. The available results are furthermore presented in the Annexes.

2010

Hepato(Geno)Toxicity Assessment of Nanoparticles in a HepG2 Liver Spheroid Model

(1) In compliance with the 3Rs policy to reduce, refine and replace animal experiments, the development of advanced in vitro models is needed for nanotoxicity assessment. Cells cultivated in 3D resemble organ structures better than 2D cultures. This study aims to compare cytotoxic and genotoxic responses induced by titanium dioxide (TiO2), silver (Ag) and zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles (NPs) in 2D monolayer and 3D spheroid cultures of HepG2 human liver cells. (2) NPs were characterized by electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering, laser Doppler anemometry, UV-vis spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Cytotoxicity was investigated by the alamarBlue assay and confocal microscopy in HepG2 monolayer and spheroid cultures after 24 h of NP exposure. DNA damage (strand breaks and oxidized base lesions) was measured by the comet assay. (3) Ag-NPs were aggregated at 24 h, and a substantial part of the ZnO-NPs was dissolved in culture medium. Ag-NPs induced stronger cytotoxicity in 2D cultures (EC50 3.8 µg/cm2) than in 3D cultures (EC50 > 30 µg/cm2), and ZnO-NPs induced cytotoxicity to a similar extent in both models (EC50 10.1–16.2 µg/cm2). Ag- and ZnO-NPs showed a concentration-dependent genotoxic effect, but the effect was not statistically significant. TiO2-NPs showed no toxicity (EC50 > 75 µg/cm2). (4) This study shows that the HepG2 spheroid model is a promising advanced in vitro model for toxicity assessment of NPs.

2020

HepG2 liver spheroids: promising advanced in vitro model for toxicity testing

Elje, Elisabeth; Dusinska, Maria; Mariussen, Espen; Hesler, M.; Kohl, Y.; Wagner, Sylvia; Moriones, Oscar H.; Bastus, Neus G.; Puntes, Victor; Rundén-Pran, Elise

2019

Her fyrer vi mest og minst med ved

Grythe, Henrik (interview subject); Leine, Jan Erlend (journalist)

2024

Herring gull and common eider as indicators of contaminants in an urban fjord

Thorstensen, H. S.; Ruus, Anders; Helberg, Morten; Bæk, Kine; Enge, Ellen Katrin; Borgå, Katrine

2020

Hexachlorocyclohexanes trace pathways and processes in the Canadian archipelago.

Bidleman, T.F.; Jantunen, L.M.; Kylin, H.; Helm, P.A.; MacDonald, R.W.

2007

HFC-43-10mee atmospheric abundances and global emission estimates.

Arnold, T.; Ivy, D.J.; Harth, C.M.; Vollmer, M.K.; Muhle, J.; Salameh, P.K.; Steele, L.P.; Krummel, P.B.; Wang, R.H.J.; Young, D.; Lunder, C.R.; Hermansen, O.; Rhee, T.S.; Kim, J.; Reimann, S.; O'Doherty, S.; Fraser, P.J.; Simmonds, P.G.; Prinn, R.G.; Weiss, R.F.

2014

Hg deposition onto snow surface during mercury depletion events in Ny-Ålesund (Svalbard) from April to May 2003: Temporal and spatial evolutions. Evaluation of deposition and re-emission fluxes of Hg.

Ferrari, C.P.; Gauchard, P.-A.; Dommergue, A.; Magand, O.; Nagorski, S.; Boutron, C.F.; Temme, C.; Bahlmann, E.; Ebinghaus, R.; Steffen, A.; Banic, C.; Aspmo, K.; Berg, T.; Planchon, F.; Barbate, C.

2004

Hierarchical Clustering and Dissimilarity Polygon Analyses. Optimizing the Polish Deposition Network.

The potential re-design of the current deposition monitoring network in Poland was assessed by hierarchical clustering analysis. This statistical method determines the inherent or natural groupings of datasets, and/or to provide a summarization of data into groups using different metrics to assess the (di)similarity. The metrics are based on the correlation, to assess the temporal similarity, the Euclidean distance, to assess the magnitude similarity, and the combination of both. This method was used to assess the areas with similar deposition patters across the country based on measurement and model data for acidic compounds and heavy metals. The analysis clearly identified stations potentially redundant or measuring unique deposition patters and regions that represent the potential location of a single station.

NILU

2023

High arctic ultraviolet (UV) radiation levels in the spring of 2011 caused by unprecedented chemical ozone loss.

Bernhard, G.; Fioletov, V.; Heikkilä, A.; Johnsen, B.; Koskela, T.; Lakkela, K.; Myhre, C.L.

2012

High Arctic UV radiation levels in the spring of 2011 caused by unprecedented chemical ozone loss. NILU PP

Bernhard, G.; Fioletov, V.; Heikkilä, A.; Johnsen, B.; Koskela, T.; Lakkala, K.; Myhre, C.L.

2012

High concentrations of organic contaminants in air from ship breaking activities in Chittagong, Bangladesh.

Nøst, T.H.; Halse, A.K.; Randall, S.; Borgen, A.R.; Schlabach, M.; Paul, A.; Rahman, A.; Breivik, K.

2015

High levels of emerging and legacy contaminants in stranded marine mammals from Norway

Andvik, Clare Margaret; Jourdain, Eve Marie; Lyche, Jan Ludvig; Harju, Mikael; Haug, Tore; Enge, Ellen Katrin; Karoliussen, Richard; Borgå, Katrine

2021

High levels of emerging and legacy contaminants in whales from Norway

Andvik, Clare Margaret; Jourdain, Eve Marie; Lyche, Jan Ludvig; Enge, Ellen Katrin; Harju, Mikael; Haug, Tore; Karoliussen, Richard; Borgå, Katrine

2022

High levels of ultraviolet radiation observed by ground-based instruments below the 2011 Arctic ozone hole.

Bernhard, G.; Dahlback, A.; Fioletov, V.; Heikkilä, A.; Johnsen, B.; Koskela, T.; Lakkala, K.; Svendby, T.

2013

High resolution GDP modelling for climate risk assessments with an application to coastal flooding in Norway

Barre, Francis Isidore; Bouman, Evert Alwin; Simpson, Matthew James Ross; Borck, Hilde Sande; Hertwich, Edgar; Moran, Daniel Dean

2025

High resolution mass spectrometry-based non-target screening can support regulatory environmental monitoring and chemicals management

Non-target screening (NTS) including suspect screening with high resolution mass spectrometry has already shown its feasibility in detecting and identifying emerging contaminants, which subsequently triggered exposure mitigating measures. NTS has a large potential for tasks such as effective evaluation of regulations for safe marketing of substances and products, prioritization of substances for monitoring programmes and assessment of environmental quality. To achieve this, a further development of NTS methodology is required, including: (i) harmonized protocols and quality requirements, (ii) infrastructures for efficient data management, data evaluation and data sharing and (iii) sufficient resources and appropriately trained personnel in the research and regulatory communities in Europe. Recommendations for achieving these three requirements are outlined in the following discussion paper. In particular, in order to facilitate compound identification it is recommended that the relevant information for interpretation of mass spectra, as well as about the compounds usage and production tonnages, should be made accessible to the scientific community (via open-access databases). For many purposes, NTS should be implemented in combination with effect-based methods to focus on toxic chemicals.

2019

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