Monday, April 28, 2025

 

Dangerous synthetic opioids and animal sedatives found in wastewater



University of South Australia




University of South Australia scientists have developed a highly sensitive method to detect illegal opioids and a veterinary sedative in Australia’s wastewater system, providing a vital early warning tool to public health authorities.

new study published in Environmental Science and Pollution Research, funded by the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission and Preventative Health SA, explains the innovative wastewater-based testing method capable of identifying trace levels of nitazenes – a class of highly potent synthetic opioids – and xylazine, an animal sedative not approved for human use.

Nitazenes are among the most dangerous opioids ever synthesised, up to 1000 times more potent than morphine. Initially developed in the 1950s but never approved for clinical use, these substances have recently emerged in the illicit drug supply worldwide. Their extreme potency poses a significant risk of overdose, often with fatal consequences.

Xylazine, commonly used in veterinary medicine, is often added to illicit opioids such as fentanyl and heroin. It complicates overdose treatment because its effects cannot be reversed with naloxone, the standard emergency antidote for opioid toxicity. Moreover, xylazine use is associated with severe health impacts including sedation, respiratory depression, hypotension, and dangerous skin ulcerations.

“This is the first time a comprehensive suite of nitazene compounds and xylazine has been monitored in Australian wastewater,” says lead researcher UniSA Associate Professor Cobus Gerber.

“Our method can detect even minute levels, allowing us to track emerging threats before they escalate,” he says.

Over a three-day period in August 2024, researchers analysed 180 wastewater samples from 60 sites around Australia. They identified five different nitazenes in 3–6% of all samples. Alarmingly, xylazine was detected in 26% of all samples.

“Given the potency of nitazenes and the health complications associated with xylazine, even low-level detections are a red flag,” says co-first author Dr Emma Keller.

The research team developed a laboratory method using solid phase extraction and liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to concentrate and identify target compounds. The method achieved up to 1000-fold enrichment, with limits of detection well below 1 ng/L for most substances.

Crucially, the method is adaptable and can be quickly updated to detect new derivatives as they emerge – an essential capability as drug manufacturers continue to tweak chemical structures to evade legislation.

“This analytical platform enhances Australia’s capacity to monitor and respond to the shifting landscape of illicit drug use,” says Assoc Prof Gerber. “It complements forensic analysis and can provide near real-time data to inform public health strategies.”

The results underscore the growing presence of harmful and often unsuspected substances in street-level drugs. In the United States, xylazine has already been detected in over 80% of fentanyl-containing paraphernalia and is implicated in an increasing number of overdose deaths.

“With similar patterns now being detected in Australia and nitazenes also infiltrating the stimulant market, there’s an urgent need to raise awareness and strengthen harm reduction responses,” Assoc Prof Gerber says.

“Comprehensive method to detect nitazene analogues and xylazine in wastewater” is authored by Emma L. Keller, Brock Peake, Bradley S. Simpson, Jason M. White and Cobus Gerber.
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-025-36425-0

 

 

Buprenorphine treatment in pregnancy and maternal-infant outcomes



JAMA Health Forum


About The Study: In this cohort study of pregnant individuals with opioid use disorder, buprenorphine treatment was associated with improved outcomes for the mother and infant, underscoring the need to improve access to treatment nationwide.



Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Stephen W. Patrick, MD, MPH, MS, email stephen.patrick@emory.edu.

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/

(doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.1814)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

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Media advisory: This study is being presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies 2025 meeting.

Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama-health-forum/fullarticle/10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.1814?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=042725

About JAMA Health Forum: JAMA Health Forum is an international, peer-reviewed, online, open access journal that addresses health policy and strategies affecting medicine, health and health care. The journal publishes original research, evidence-based reports and opinion about national and global health policy; innovative approaches to health care delivery; and health care economics, access, quality, safety, equity and reform. Its distribution will be solely digital and all content will be freely available for anyone to read.

 

 

Heart disease deaths worldwide linked to chemical widely used in plastics




NYU Langone Health / NYU Grossman School of Medicine



Daily exposure to certain chemicals used to make plastic household items could be linked to more than 356,000 global deaths from heart disease in 2018 alone, a new analysis of population surveys shows.

While the chemicals, called phthalates, are in widespread use globally, the Middle East, South Asia, East Asia, and the Pacific bore a much larger share of the death toll than others — about three-fourths of the total.

For decades, experts have connected health problems to exposure to certain phthalates found in cosmetics, detergents, solvents, plastic pipes, bug repellants, and other products. When these chemicals break down into microscopic particles and are ingested, studies have linked them to an increased risk of conditions ranging from obesity and diabetes to fertility issues and cancer.

Led by researchers at NYU Langone Health, the current study focused on a kind of phthalate called di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP), which is used to make food containers, medical equipment, and other plastic softer and more flexible. Exposure has been shown in other studies to prompt an overactive immune response (inflammation) in the heart’s arteries, which, over time, is associated with increased risk of heart attack or stroke. In their new analysis, the authors estimated that DEHP exposure contributed to 356,238 deaths, or more than 13% of all global mortality from heart disease in 2018 among men and women ages 55 through 64.

“By highlighting the connection between phthalates and a leading cause of death across the world, our findings add to the vast body of evidence that these chemicals present a tremendous danger to human health,” said study lead author Sara Hyman, BS, an associate research scientist at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

According to the authors, the resulting economic burden from the deaths identified in their study was estimated to be around $510 billion and may have reached as high as $3.74 trillion.

In a past study from 2021, the research team tied phthalates to more than 50,000 premature deaths each year, mostly from heart disease, among older Americans. Their latest investigation is believed to be the first global estimate to date of cardiovascular mortality — or indeed any health outcome — resulting from exposure to the chemicals, says Hyman, who is also a graduate student at NYU School of Public Global Health.

A report on the findings is publishing online April 29 in the journal Lancet eBiomedicine.

For the research, the team used health and environmental data from dozens of population surveys to estimate DEHP exposure across 200 countries and territories. The information included urine samples containing chemical breakdown products left by the plastic additive. Mortality data was obtained from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, a research group in the US that collects medical information worldwide to identify trends in public health.

Among the key findings, the study showed that losses in the combined region of East Asia and the Middle East and the combined region of East Asia and the Pacific accounted, respectively, for about 42% and 32% of the mortality from heart disease linked to DEHP. Specifically, India had the highest death count at 103,587 deaths, followed by China and Indonesia. The larger heart death risks in these populations held true even after the researchers adjusted their statistical analysis to take into account population size within the studied age group.

A possible explanation, the authors say, is that these countries face higher rates of exposure to the chemicals, possibly because they are undergoing a boom in plastic production but with fewer manufacturing restrictions than other regions.

“There is a clear disparity in which parts of the world bear the brunt of heightened heart risks from phthalates,” said study senior author Leonardo Trasande, MD, MPP. “Our results underscore the urgent need for global regulations to reduce exposure to these toxins, especially in areas most affected by rapid industrialization and plastic consumption,” added Trasande, the Jim G. Hendrick, MD, Professor of Pediatrics at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.

Trasande, who is also a professor in the Department of Population Health, cautions that the analysis was not designed to establish that DEHP directly or alone caused heart disease and that higher death risks did not take into account other types of phthalates. Nor did it include mortality among those in other age groups. As a result, the overall death toll from heart disease connected to these chemicals is likely much higher, he says.

Trasande says that the researchers next plan to track how reductions in phthalate exposure may, over time, affect global mortality rates, as well as to expand the study to other health concerns posed by the chemicals, such as preterm birth. Trasande also serves as director of NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s Division of Environmental Pediatrics and the Center for the Investigation of Environmental Hazards.

Funding for the study was provided by National Institutes of Health grant P2CES033423. Further study funding was provided by Beyond Petrochemicals.

Trasande has received support for travel or meetings from the Endocrine Society, World Health Organization, the United Nations Environment Programme, Japan’s Environment and Health Ministries, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. He has also received royalties and licenses from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Audible, Paidós, and Kobunsha, and has served in leadership or fiduciary roles at Beautycounter, Ahimsa, Grassroots Environmental Education, and Footprint. None of these activities were related to the current study. The terms and conditions of all of these relationships are being managed by NYU Langone Health.

In addition to Hyman and Trasande, other NYU Langone researchers involved in the study are Jonathan Acevedo, MPH, and Chiara Gianarelli, MD, PhD.

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About NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone Health is a fully integrated health system that consistently achieves the best patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation. Vizient Inc. has ranked NYU Langone No. 1 out of 115 comprehensive academic medical centers across the nation for three years in a row, and U.S. News & World Report recently placed nine of its clinical specialties among the top five in the nation. NYU Langone offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high standard of care across seven inpatient locations, its Perlmutter Cancer Center, and more than 320 outpatient locations in the New York area and Florida. With $14.2 billion in revenue this year, the system also includes two tuition-free medical schools, in Manhattan and on Long Island, and a vast research enterprise.

Media Inquiries:
Shira Polan
Phone: 212-404-4279
shira.polan@nyulangone.org

Link to interactive global map of excess cardiovascular mortality due to DEHP

 

 

 

Numerical investigation of seismic performance and size effect in CFRP-reinforced concrete shear walls




ELSP
The study approaches the size effect problem from three aspects, culminating in a proposed correction formula that demonstrates high accuracy in predicting the seismic performance of CFRP-reinforced shear walls. Validated through numerical analysis, the f 

image: 

The study approaches the size effect problem from three aspects, culminating in a proposed correction formula that demonstrates high accuracy in predicting the seismic performance of CFRP-reinforced shear walls. Validated through numerical analysis, the formula shows strong applicability to existing size-effect investigations, offering a practical tool for enhancing the reliability of seismic design across varying wall geometries.

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Credit: Bo Li/Beijing University of Technology, Dong Li/Beijing University of Technology, Fengjuan Chen/Beijing University of Technology, Liu Jin/Beijing University of Technology, Xiuli Du/Beijing University of Technology





Researchers have explored the potential of carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP)-reinforced concrete composites to overcome the brittle failure and residual deformation commonly observed in conventional shear walls during seismic events. Published in Smart Construction Materials and Design, this study leverages the superior strength-to-weight ratio, corrosion resistance, and self-centering capability of CFRP to address post-earthquake reparability challenges. By numerically analyzing 28 CFRP-RC shear wall models under varying shear span ratios, horizontal reinforcement ratios, and height-to-thickness ratios, the research evaluates critical seismic performance indicators including hysteretic behavior, strength degradation, ductility, and residual deformation. A refined size-effect correction model, integrating CFRP strain distribution characteristics, is proposed to address existing limitations in seismic performance prediction—paving the way for more resilient, damage-tolerant, and performance-based structural designs in earthquake-prone regions.

This study uses finite element numerical simulation to systematically investigate the seismic performance of carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) reinforced concrete shear walls. A three-dimensional mesoscale finite element model was developed using Abaqus, incorporating nonlinear damage behavior of concrete, linear-elastic properties of CFRP tendons, and bond-slip effects at the tendon-concrete interface.

1. Material Constitutive Models

  1. Concrete: The Concrete Damaged Plasticity (CDP) model was employed to accurately simulate the damage evolution under alternating tension and compression.
  2. CFRP tendons: The brittle fracture characteristics of CFRP tendons were represented using a linear-elastic constitutive relationship.
  3. Interface behavior: A nonlinear contact model was used to capture bond degradation and slip effects on global structural performance.

2. Key Parameter Analysis

The effects of key design parameters—height-to-thickness ratio, shear span ratio, and horizontal reinforcement ratio—were analyzed through low-cycle reciprocal loading simulations. Structural performance indicators such as ductility coefficient, stiffness degradation, strength degradation, energy dissipation, and residual deformation were evaluated. Main findings include:

  1. Height-to-thickness ratio: An increase significantly reduces ductility and energy dissipation. The hysteresis curves exhibit shear-dominated characteristics, and plastic development is limited.
  2. Shear span ratio: A low ratio leads to shear-dominated failure, rapid stiffness degradation, and weakened hysteretic performance.
  3. Horizontal reinforcement ratio: Moderate increases improve ductility and load-retention capacity. However, excessive reinforcement can cause stress concentration and localized instability.

3. Size Effect and Correction Formula

The study demonstrates that wall geometry—particularly height-to-thickness ratio—significantly influences crack patterns, failure modes, and hysteretic behavior. As the height-to-thickness ratio increases, cracks become more unevenly distributed, failure transitions from global flexure to localized shear, hysteresis area decreases, and energy dissipation capacity is reduced. Additionally, larger wall sizes accelerate stiffness degradation and increase residual deformation.

To address these effects, a size effect correction formula considering height-to-thickness ratio was proposed. This formula improves the accuracy of ductility and strength predictions across varying wall sizes and offers a theoretical basis for seismic performance evaluation of large-scale shear walls in practical engineering.

This study reveals the mechanisms by which CFRP reinforcement configuration and geometric scaling affect seismic behavior. The proposed correction formula significantly enhances prediction accuracy and provides a technical foundation for reliable implementation in seismic zone applications. Future work will focus on experimental validation and optimization of dynamic response analysis under multi-dimensional seismic loading.

This paper “ Numerical investigation of seismic performance and size effect in CFRP-reinforced concrete shear walls” was published in Smart Construction.

Li B, Li D, Chen F, Jin L, Du X. Numerical investigation of seismic performance and size effect in CFRP-reinforced concrete shear walls. Smart Constr. 2025 (1): 0007, https://doi.org/10.55092/sc20250007.

 

Interview opportunity: Women are overtaking men in the most extreme sports events



Frontiers
Extreme sports 

image: 

Start of the Alaska Ski Classic

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Credit: Robert Coker





Much of the work devoted to exploring potential sex-specific differences in exercise or sports performance has been derived from laboratory-based studies. While these studies are typically well-controlled and guide our understanding of physiological mechanisms, they may lack pragmatic or practical relevance to the ‘real world’.

Shrinking performance gaps between the sexes in sport and extreme challenges

In 1967, Katherine V Switzer, the daughter of a US Army officer, became the first woman to complete the Boston Marathon as an officially registered competitor. She was assaulted by the race manager, Jock Semple, who attempted to remove her race bib. This shocking incident led to a ban imposed by the Amateur Athletic Union against women participating in the event until 1972. What was the reasoning behind such an act? Race officials claimed that women could not run that far, and the rules forbade it. Fortunately, the consensus evolved, and the rules changed. Katherine and Jock later became friends.

Johny Hayes, an American male set the first marathon world record during the London Olympics in 1908. A Kenyan male, Kelvin Kiptum, currently holds the marathon world record at 2h00min:35s, set during the Chicago Marathon in 2023. Ruth Chepng’etich, a Kenyan female, set the women’s marathon world record in the same event at 2h:09min:56s, only 9min21s behind her male counterpart. Over the past few decades, athletes have benefited from improved nutrition and footwear, as well as the use of pacesetters to break the wind, all of which may improve performance.  Athletes with anthropometric and lifestyle phenotypes well-suited for marathons also contribute to the record-breaking trend. Closer examination, however, reveals an overall shrinking gap in athletic performance between males and females.

Are women more metabolically efficient under extreme physiological circumstances?

Strength, power, speed, and endurance are typically between 10% and 30% greater in males compared to females. However, recent work suggests a shrinking reduction in the performance gap between the sexes as the distance and/or duration increases. Here we address this important issue in our recent study in Frontiers in Physiology. Using the doubly labeled water method, we reported lower total energy expenditure relative to load carriage in women compared to men during the Alaska Mountain Wilderness Ski Classic – a remote and unsupported 200km Arctic winter expedition . These findings indicate greater metabolic efficiency in women under such extreme conditions.

Sex-specific physiological differences in athletic performance are largely determined by variations in sex chromosomes and hormones. Testosterone levels increase approximately 30-fold in males during puberty and are closely linked to increased muscle mass and strength. In contrast, testosterone levels remain relatively low throughout the lifespan of females.

The menstrual cycle is marked by fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone in females, but these hormones stay relatively constant in males. Elevations in estrogen during the follicular phase have been posited to enhance fat oxidation. However, a recent meta-analysis concluded that variations in estrogen have a minimal impact on metabolism.

So what about ultramarathons and even more extreme events? Pamela Reed and Hiroko Okiyama outperformed their male counterparts in the Badwater and Deutschlandlauf ultramarathons, respectively. While these may be isolated cases, the gap in race durations between males and females has decreased by  approximately 3% in events lasting six, 72, 144, and 240 hours over the past four decades. When males and females compete in similar numbers, the gap decreases even further. Fewer elite females participate in ultras compared to elite males.

In studying physiological resilience in athletes participating in the Yukon Arctic Ultra (YAU), the longest and coldest ultramarathon in the world, we observed while working alongside Dr Mathias Steinach (affiliated with the Center for Space Medicine, Berlin)that not a single participant with a body mass index (BMI) of 22 kg/m2  has ever completed the event  In fact, the average BMI for this event is approximately 24 kg/mfor both males and females, with fat mass being 30% higher in females. Despite males having greater amounts of lean tissue mass and less fat mass compared to females, the number of finishers in both sexes is essentially equivalent.

Recent studies have described an ‘Arctic shift’ in females, indicating the activation of cold-induced thermogenesis at a lower temperature compared to males, and potentially reducing metabolic demands under cold stress. Leveraging plasma, serum, stool, hair, muscle and adipose tissue samples from the YAU cohort, future studies will explore the mechanisms responsible for similar levels of resilience despite differences in lean tissue.

Females in combat-forward military scenarios

As a surrogate model for military operations, we measured rates of total energy expenditure (TEE) during backcountry hunting expeditions in Alaska. Hunters, who also volunteer as research participants, are dropped off via bush plane in the wilderness with a backpack, a rifle, and a satellite phone for between two and four weeks. Females typically carry more weight relative to body weight than males, but are no less capable or resilient. Although the number of participants was small, TEE/lean tissue mass was similar in both males and females, indicating no difference in energy expenditure dedicated to physical exertion. Utilizing new stable isotope methods developed with our collaborators at the University of California Berkeley, we are now studying sex-specific alterations in the structural integrity, cellular respiration and contractile function of skeletal muscle in this cohort.

Although men have historically dominated protective roles in society, emerging data from endurance events conducted in extreme environments suggest that women may be equally, if not more, metabolically resilient under physical and nutritional stress.

We think that one of the coolest (pun intended) aspects of being scientists is that we continually challenge dogma to find new answers to old problems. Perhaps the best-selling author John Gray was right with one minor correction: women may be from Mars (colder), and men may be from Venus (warmer).