2010
DOI: 10.1586/ern.10.61
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Trichloroethylene and Parkinson’s disease: dissolving the puzzle

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Cited by 27 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…In fact, there is an association of Parkinson’s Disease in humans with TCE exposure 84–88 with up to a six-fold increased risk in one study 89 . TCE exposure studies using animal models provide further evidence for a toxicological role for CYP2E1 activtiy 87, 90 .…”
Section: Exogenous Substrates Of Cyp2e1 That Damage Mitochondriamentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In fact, there is an association of Parkinson’s Disease in humans with TCE exposure 84–88 with up to a six-fold increased risk in one study 89 . TCE exposure studies using animal models provide further evidence for a toxicological role for CYP2E1 activtiy 87, 90 .…”
Section: Exogenous Substrates Of Cyp2e1 That Damage Mitochondriamentioning
confidence: 95%
“…1 Exposure to pesticides and industrial agents has been associated with an increased risk for PD [17, 18], but to date none of these agents have been consistently identified as a causal factor for PD [19]. It is known that exposure to inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration [2025] are sufficient to induce PD symptoms in humans and DA neurodegeneration in animal models.…”
Section: Neurodegeneration In Parkinson’s Disease Arises From Dysregumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Solvents have most often been examined epidemiologically as a single, aggregate category, and the effects of particular solvents have rarely been assessed; given that solvents represent a very large group of disparate compounds, any true association between PD and a particular agent (e.g. TCE) could be obscured (Goldman 2010 ;Goldman et al 2012a ). Exposure assessment methods are very limited, and are likely to misclassify exposed individuals.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exposure misclassifi cation also presents a problem, as recognition and/or recollection of exposures may be poor. Estimation of dose can also be challenging (Goldman 2010 ), limiting our ability to detect any dose-response effects. In addition, solvent exposures are unlikely to occur in isolation, making it diffi cult to tease apart effects specifi cally attributable to TCE.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%