TY - BOOK AU - Ishido,Masami ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Health Risk Assessment of Environmental Chemicals: Pre-Emptive and Integrated Approaches SN - 9789819915606 AV - RA1190-1270 U1 - 615.90072 23 PY - 2023/// CY - Singapore PB - Springer Nature Singapore, Imprint: Springer KW - Toxicology KW - Environmental health KW - Neurochemistry KW - Neurosciences KW - Biochemistry KW - Environmental Health KW - Neuroscience N1 - Acceso multiusuario; Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. The safe dose in the utilization of chemicals -- Chapter 3. Carcinogens -- Chapter 4. Endocrine disruptors -- Chapter 5. Nanomaterials -- Chapter 6. Epigenetic chemicals -- Chapter 7. Toward the integrated Health risk assessment of chemicals -- Chapter 8. Expanded toxicological mechanisms of chemicals -- Chapter 9. Fields and exposure periods -- Chapter 10. Environmental chemicals as plasticity disruptors -- Chapter 11. It began with the pharmacological evaluation of endocrine disruptors -- Chapter 12. Integration of health risk assessment for various chemicals: Common biomarkers in different exposure routes -- Chapter 13. Toward a dimension-free, pre-emptive, integrated health risk assessment of chemicals -- Chapter 14. Inheritance of neurological disorders -- Chapter 15. Epigenetics -- Chapter 16. Environmental epigenetics N2 - This book presents the frontier research of toxicology and health risk assessment of chemicals. First, it provides an overview of the current methods of evaluating safety amounts of chemicals and provides a new aspect of the principle of toxicology. Secondly, it shows recent research where the new method of health risk evaluation is adopted, followed by an integrated health risk assessment of chemicals. Finally, it describes the epigenetic inheritance of chemical impact on health throughout several generations. Estimating the safety amount of chemicals surrounding our lives is not sufficient for health risk evaluation, particularly for carcinogenic compounds, endocrine disruptors, and nano materials. The author's group has found a family of chemicals linked to ADHD through animal screening and identified its chemical nature using chemoinformatics methods. Based on these new developments, this book proposes to utilize the biomarker common to those chemicals for health risk assessment, independent of exposure routes and physiological dimensions. The book appeals to researchers and students in the field of toxicology, health risk assessment, pharmacology, and public health. UR - http://libcon.rec.uabc.mx:2048/login?url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-1560-6 ER -