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  • JAMA. Health Effects of the Gulf Oil Spill

    Health Effects of the Gulf Oil Spill (JAMA, commentary, excerpt)


    [Source: JAMA, full free text, <cite cite="http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/jama.2010.1254v1?etoc">JAMA -- Health Effects of the Gulf Oil Spill, August 16, 2010, Solomon and Janssen 0 (2010): jama.2010.1254v1</cite>. Commentary, first two paragraphs, excerpt, edited.]

    added November 30, 2010 - The text is no longer free and the link has changed. The new one to an excerpt: http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content...ct/304/10/1118 - s.s.

    Health Effects of the Gulf Oil Spill

    Gina M. Solomon, MD, MPH; Sarah Janssen, MD, PhD, MPH

    JAMA. Published online August 16, 2010. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.1254


    The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico poses direct threats to human health from inhalation or dermal contact with the oil and dispersant chemicals, and indirect threats to seafood safety and mental health. Physicians should be familiar with health effects from oil spills to appropriately advise, diagnose, and treat patients who live and work along the Gulf Coast or wherever a major oil spill occurs.

    The main components of crude oil are aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons.1 Lower-molecular-weight aromatics—such as benzene, toluene, and xylene—are volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and evaporate within hours after the oil reaches the surface. Volatile organic compounds can cause respiratory irritation and central nervous system (CNS) depression. Benzene is known to cause leukemia in humans, and toluene is a recognized teratogen at high doses.1 Higher-molecular-weight chemicals such as naphthalene evaporate more slowly. Naphthalene is listed by the National Toxicology Program as "reasonably anticipated to cause cancer in humans" based on olfactory neuroblastomas, nasal tumors, and lung cancers in animals.2 Oil can also release hydrogen sulfide gas and contains traces of heavy metals, as well as nonvolatile polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that can contaminate the food chain. Hydrogen sulfide gas is neurotoxic and has been linked to both acute and chronic CNS effects; PAHs include mutagens and probable carcinogens.1 Burning oil generates particulate matter, which is associated with cardiac and respiratory symptoms and premature mortality. The Gulf oil spill is unique because of the large-scale use of dispersants to break up the oil slick. By late July, more than 1.8 million gallons of dispersant had been applied in the Gulf. Dispersants contain detergents, surfactants, and petroleum distillates, including respiratory irritants such as 2-butoxyethanol, propylene glycol, and sulfonic acid salts.

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    Last edited by sharon sanders; November 30, 2010, 08:15 AM. Reason: made edit in red above

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    Re: JAMA. Health Effects of the Gulf Oil Spill

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