PPTOXIII: Environmental stressors in the developmental origins of disease: evidence and mechanisms
PPTOXIII: Environmental stressors in the developmental origins of disease: evidence and mechanisms
Fetal and early postnatal development constitutes the most vulnerable time period of human life in regard to adverse effects of environmental hazards. Subtle effects during development can lead to functional deficits and increased disease risk later in life. The hypothesis stating that environmental exposures leads to altered programming and, thereby, to increased susceptibility to disease or dysfunction later in life has garnered much support from both experimental and epidemiological studies. Similar observations have been made on the long-term impact of nutritional unbalance during early development. In an effort to bridge the fields of nutritional and environmental developmental toxicity, the Society of Toxicology sponsored this work. This report summarizes novel findings in developmental toxicity as reported by select invited experts and meeting attendees. Recommendations for the application and improvement of current and future research efforts are also presented.
developmental origins of health and disease, developmental toxicity, early-life exposure
343-350
Schug, T.T.
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Barouki, R.
38857f20-76fb-4dfe-babf-f4fea9514e68
Gluckman, Peter D.
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Grandjean, P.
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Heindel, J.J.
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Schug, T.T.
d99f4de9-1ba0-4bf4-b30c-9463883e2082
Barouki, R.
38857f20-76fb-4dfe-babf-f4fea9514e68
Gluckman, Peter D.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Grandjean, P.
7ccc53d2-b777-4c4e-a120-22a06d0633e9
Heindel, J.J.
9923f492-f5e7-4f91-84cd-89994c3f1931
Schug, T.T., Barouki, R., Gluckman, Peter D., Grandjean, P. and Heindel, J.J.
(2012)
PPTOXIII: Environmental stressors in the developmental origins of disease: evidence and mechanisms.
Toxicological Sciences, 131 (2), .
(doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfs267).
Abstract
Fetal and early postnatal development constitutes the most vulnerable time period of human life in regard to adverse effects of environmental hazards. Subtle effects during development can lead to functional deficits and increased disease risk later in life. The hypothesis stating that environmental exposures leads to altered programming and, thereby, to increased susceptibility to disease or dysfunction later in life has garnered much support from both experimental and epidemiological studies. Similar observations have been made on the long-term impact of nutritional unbalance during early development. In an effort to bridge the fields of nutritional and environmental developmental toxicity, the Society of Toxicology sponsored this work. This report summarizes novel findings in developmental toxicity as reported by select invited experts and meeting attendees. Recommendations for the application and improvement of current and future research efforts are also presented.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 September 2012
Keywords:
developmental origins of health and disease, developmental toxicity, early-life exposure
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 348625
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348625
ISSN: 1096-6080
PURE UUID: c1a6baef-52b8-4753-bb76-519bc44ec946
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Date deposited: 18 Feb 2013 09:45
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:07
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Contributors
Author:
T.T. Schug
Author:
R. Barouki
Author:
P. Grandjean
Author:
J.J. Heindel
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