Human risk assessment of dioxins and dioxin-like compounds relies heavily on toxic equivalency factors (TEFs) that are mainly based on in vivo rodent studies. However, especially for the PCBs there are many uncertainties with respect to the actual dioxin-like activities and subsequent health effects in humans. For example, the relative effect potencies (REPs) for PCB126 are consistently up to two orders of magnitude lower in human cell models than in rodents and rodent cell cultures. For other dioxin-like (DL) PCBs, REPs can often not be obtained in human models due to a lack of AHR-mediated responses. In addition, DL-PCB-related effects such as thyroid disruption are largely attributed to mechanisms that are not (directly) AHR-mediated. Co...
There is a growing need for quantitative approaches to extrapolate relationships between chemical ex...
In June 2005, a World Health Organization (WHO)-International Programme on Chemical Safety expert me...
‘Dioxin-like’ (DL) compounds occur ubiquitously in the environment. Toxic responses associated with ...
Toxic equivalency factors (TEFs) are generally applied for estimating human risk of dioxins and diox...
Human risk assessment for dioxin-like compounds is typically based on the concentration measured in ...
Consensus toxicity factors (CTFs) were developed as a novel approach to establish toxicity factors f...
Risk assessment for mixtures of dioxin-like compounds uses the toxic equivalency factor (TEF) approa...
The Toxic Equivalency Factor (TEF) approach is a methodology that assigns relative toxicity values t...
The Toxic Equivalency Factor (TEF) approach is a methodology that assigns relative toxicity values t...
Risk assessment for mixtures of dioxin-like compounds uses the toxic equivalency factor (TEF) approa...
BACKGROUND: In the risk assessment of PCDDs, PCDFs, and dioxin-like (DL) PCBs, regulatory authoritie...
BACKGROUND: In the risk assessment of PCDDs, PCDFs, and dioxin-like (DL) PCBs, regulatory authoritie...
This thesis describes experimental work undertaken to reduce uncertainties in the risk assessment of...
There is a growing need for quantitative approaches to extrapolate relationships between chemical ex...
The toxic equivalency factor (TEF) approach has been widely accepted as the most feasible and plausi...
There is a growing need for quantitative approaches to extrapolate relationships between chemical ex...
In June 2005, a World Health Organization (WHO)-International Programme on Chemical Safety expert me...
‘Dioxin-like’ (DL) compounds occur ubiquitously in the environment. Toxic responses associated with ...
Toxic equivalency factors (TEFs) are generally applied for estimating human risk of dioxins and diox...
Human risk assessment for dioxin-like compounds is typically based on the concentration measured in ...
Consensus toxicity factors (CTFs) were developed as a novel approach to establish toxicity factors f...
Risk assessment for mixtures of dioxin-like compounds uses the toxic equivalency factor (TEF) approa...
The Toxic Equivalency Factor (TEF) approach is a methodology that assigns relative toxicity values t...
The Toxic Equivalency Factor (TEF) approach is a methodology that assigns relative toxicity values t...
Risk assessment for mixtures of dioxin-like compounds uses the toxic equivalency factor (TEF) approa...
BACKGROUND: In the risk assessment of PCDDs, PCDFs, and dioxin-like (DL) PCBs, regulatory authoritie...
BACKGROUND: In the risk assessment of PCDDs, PCDFs, and dioxin-like (DL) PCBs, regulatory authoritie...
This thesis describes experimental work undertaken to reduce uncertainties in the risk assessment of...
There is a growing need for quantitative approaches to extrapolate relationships between chemical ex...
The toxic equivalency factor (TEF) approach has been widely accepted as the most feasible and plausi...
There is a growing need for quantitative approaches to extrapolate relationships between chemical ex...
In June 2005, a World Health Organization (WHO)-International Programme on Chemical Safety expert me...
‘Dioxin-like’ (DL) compounds occur ubiquitously in the environment. Toxic responses associated with ...