Algal Blooms and Marine Biotoxins: 2001
Publications
Author: Swinker, M.,
Koltai, D., Wilkins, J., Hudnell, K., Hall, C., Darcey, D.,
Robertson, K., Schmechel, D., Stopford, W., and Music, S.
Title: Estuary-associated syndrome in North Carolina: An
occupational prevalence study.
Publication: Environmental Health Perspectives
109(1): 21-26, 2001.
© National Institute of Environmental Health
Notes:
Atlantic coast estuaries recently have experienced fish kills and
fish with lesions attributed to Pfiesteria piscicida and
related dinoflagellates. Human health effects have been reported
from laboratory exposure and from a 1997 Maryland fish kill. North
Carolina has recorded Pfiesteria-related fish kill events
over the past decade, but human health effects from environmental
exposure have not been systematically investigated or documented
here. At the request of the state health agency, comprehensive
examinations were conducted in a cross-sectional prevalence study
of watermen working where Pfiesteria exposure may occur:
waters where diseased or stressed fish were reported from June to
September 1997, and where Pfiesteria had been identified in
the past. Controls worked on unaffected waterways. The study was
conducted 3 months after the last documented
Pfiesteria-related fish kill. The goal was to document any
persistent health effects from recent or remote contact with fish
kills, fish with lesions, or affected waterways, using the 1997
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention case description
for estuary-associated syndrome (EAS). Examinations included
comprehensive medical, occupational, and environmental history,
general medical, dermatologic, and neurologic examinations, vision
testing, and neuropsychologic evaluations. Seventeen of 22
watermen working in affected waters and 11 of 21 in unaffected
waters reported exposure to a fish kill or to fish with lesions.
We found no pattern of abnormalities on medical, neurologic,
neuropsychologic, or NES-2 evaluation. By history, one subject in
each group met the EAS criteria, neither of whom had significant
neuropsychological impairment when examined. Watermen from
affected waterways had a significant reduction in visual contrast
sensitivity (VCS) at the midspatial frequencies, but we did not
identify a specific factor or exposure associated with this
reduction. The cohorts did not differ in reported occupational
exposure to solvents (qualitative) or to other neurotoxicants;
however, exposure history was not sufficiently detailed to measure
or control for solvent exposure. This small prevalence study in
watermen, conducted 3 months after the last documented fish kill
related to Pfiesteria, did not identify an increased risk
of estuary-associated syndrome in those working on affected
waterways. A significant difference between the estuary and ocean
watermen was found on VCS, which could not be attributed to any
specific factor or exposure. VCS may be affected by chemicals,
drugs, alcohol, and several developmental and degenerative
conditions; it has not been validated as being affected by known
exposure to dinoflagellate secretions. VCS should be considered
for inclusion in further studies, together with documentation or
quantification of its potential confounders, to assess whether it
has utility in relationship to dinoflagellate exposure.
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