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1.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract ; 11(5): 1394-1400, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36473626

ABSTRACT

Monitoring aeroallergens has a long history within the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. The Aeroallergen Network of the National Allergy Bureau is composed mainly of members of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, whose objectives are to enhance the knowledge of aerobiology and its relationship to allergy, increase the number of certified stations, maintain the standardization and quality of aerobiology data, improve the alert and forecast reporting system, and increase ties with other scientific entities inside and outside the United States. The public has a keen interest in pollen counts and pollen forecasts, as do many health professionals in the allergy community. In this review, we explore the past, present, and future of allergen monitoring with a focus on methods used for sampling, the training of those performing the analysis, and emerging technologies in the field. Although the development of automated samplers with machine intelligence offers great promise for meeting the goal of a fully automated system, there is still progress to be made regarding reliability and affordability.


Subject(s)
Asthma , Hypersensitivity , Humans , United States/epidemiology , Reproducibility of Results , Allergens , Hypersensitivity/diagnosis , Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Pollen
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23802157

ABSTRACT

The performance of simple slit impactors for air sampling of mold contamination was compared under field conditions. Samples were collected side-by-side, outdoors in quadruplicates with Burkhard (ambient sampler) and Allergenco MK3 spore traps and with two identical Allergenco slit cassettes operated at diverse flow rates of 5 and 15 L/min, respectively. The number and types of mold spores in each sample were quantified by microscopy. Results showed all four single-stage slit impactors produced similar spore yields. Moreover, paired slit cassettes produced similar outcomes despite a three-fold difference in their sampling rate. No measurable difference in the amount or mix of mold spores per m(3)of air was detected. The implications for assessment of human exposures and interpretation of indoor/outdoor fungal burden are discussed. These findings demonstrate that slit cassettes capture most small spores, effectively and without bias, when operated at a range of flow rates including the lower flow rates used for personal sampling. Our findings indicate sampling data for mold spores correlate for different single stage impactor collection methodologies and that data quality is not deteriorated by operating conditions deviating from manufacturers' norms allowing such sampling results to be used for scientific, legal, investigative, or property insurance purposes. The same conclusion may not be applied to other particle sampling instruments and mulit-stage impactors used for ambient particulate sampling, which represent an entirely different scenario. This knowledge may help facilitate comparison between scientific studies where methodological differences exist.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring/instrumentation , Environmental Pollutants/isolation & purification , Spores, Fungal/isolation & purification , Air Microbiology , Fungi
4.
Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol ; 19(2): 165-8, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19352447

ABSTRACT

The present article examines the work of contemporary hygiene practitioners. Discussion converges from a broad examination of hygiene at work in our society serving the common good to occupational hygiene in the workplace. The article considers the expanding role of hygiene today, juxtaposed against the lack of awareness and perceptions of hygiene. It considers some of the current social challenges facing hygiene, perceptions of risk and problems specifically encountered by occupational hygienists.

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