Review: Relational Database of Information on Potential Endocrine Disrupters Reviewed by Dale Stirling Intertox, USA Relational Database of Information on Potential Endocrine Disrupters. Leicester, UK: Institute for Environment & Health, University of Leicester, 2002. CD-ROM (Version 1). £450 Recently, there has been increased attention to the potential effects synthetic chemicals have on human and wildlife endocrine systems. These systems are essential elements in the life of multicelluar animals and the chance that chemicals may harm hormone receptors or hormone transport mechanisms is of great concern. At this time evidence of endocrine disruption is much stronger for fish and wildlife than in humans. Regardless, much research and publication has occurred since this issue became a red flag issue in the late 1990s. One of the newest and most innovative endocrine disrupter related resources is the Institute for Environment & Health's (IEH) Relational Database of Information on Potential Endocrine Disrupters (REDIPED) which is a CD-ROM-based product that contains information on 79 potential endocrine disrupting chemicals. Chemicals are selected from a main chemical navigation page using a drop-down menu or typing in the name or CAS #. Information for each chemical includes chemical identity (includes CAS #, chemical family names, chemical formula, synonyms, and related compounds), physical properties (includes standard data such as boiling point, flammability, melting point, etc.), volumes (refers to historical and contemporary market volumes from four geographic regions-UK, European Union, USA, and global), uses (relates to the primary or main use of a chemical and also their categorization-agro, consumer, food, industrial, natural, pharmaceutical, or veterinary product), regulations (notes whether the chemical appears on one of five lists of regulated chemicals), sources of exposure (lists ways by which a chemical may be released into the environment), exposure assessment (provides data concerning actual data on human or wildlife exposure or the likelihood of such exposure occurring), environmental accumulation (information on a chemicals potential to accumulate in organisms), environmental degradation (the rate of degradation of a chemical in various environmental media), fate (the environmental compartments in which a chemical or its breakdown products are most likely to occur), and biological activity ( QSAR activity, in vitro and in vivo activity, binding abilities, relative activity, and general toxic effects of
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