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Project 2- The Impact of PAH Exposure on Childhood Growth Trajectories and Visceral Adipose Tissue Mass in Adolescence: Linkages to Disrupted Self-Regulatory Processes

Parent Title:
The Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health
Grant Number:
Principal Investigator:
Rundle, Andrew G
Institution:
Columbia University
Most Recent Award Year:
2015
Lifestage of Participants:
Exposure: Prenatal; Adulthood (mother)
Assessment: Youth (1-18 years)
Exposures:
Air Pollutants: Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
Health Outcomes:
Metabolic Outcomes: Obesity/body weight
Neurological/Cognitive Outcomes: Neurobehavioral outcomes
Biological Sample:
Blood; Urine
Environmental Sample:
Air sample
Other Participant Data:
Cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and adiposity (CEBA) problems; Abdominal visceral adipose tissue mass; Eating behaviors; Sedentary behaviors; Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans
Abstract:

Related NIEHS-Funded Study Populations

New York City Mothers and Newborns Study

Principal Investigator:
Institution:
Columbia University
Location:
New York, New York
Number of Participants::
~725 Mother-infant pairs
Brief Description::
This is a birth cohort study of minority mothers and children in New York City that examines the effects of early life exposures to air pollutants, environmental tobacco smoke, pesticides, and endocrine disrupting chemicals on children's neurodevelopment, respiratory health, growth, and development. The study has recruited approximately 725 pregnant mothers since 1998.
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