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  1. Article ; Online: A Sponsor's Perspective on the Contribution of Regulatory-Required Observational Post-Marketing Studies to Understanding Human Drug Product Benefit/Risk in Japan.

    Wolter, Kevin D / Kamatani, Asayuki / Suzuki, Yumiko / Imaeda, Takayuki / Dagher, Ramzi / Safferman, Allan / Junor, Rod

    Pharmaceutical medicine

    2024  

    Abstract: Background: Following marketing authorization in Japan, for almost all new drugs or new indications, postmarketing studies (PMS) are a regulatory requirement. These PMS focus on accrual of a defined number of cases with data being collected for a ... ...

    Abstract Background: Following marketing authorization in Japan, for almost all new drugs or new indications, postmarketing studies (PMS) are a regulatory requirement. These PMS focus on accrual of a defined number of cases with data being collected for a predetermined period after approval to confirm efficacy/effectiveness, safety, and quality in the Japanese population. In contrast to other regions where PMS are only required to address a specific scientific uncertainty, in Japan, PMS are often required regardless of any specific scientific uncertainty, and therefore, their scientific value is unclear.
    Objectives: To determine the contribution to the understanding of benefit/risk of PMS conducted by Pfizer in Japan over 2000-2020 for Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) reexamination.
    Methods: A retrospective analysis of all Pfizer Japan postmarketing studies (PMS) during 2000-2020 was performed. Available Pfizer clinical study reports (CSRs) and PMDA reexamination reports (RERs) were reviewed for key safety findings. The primary analysis was conducted on the subset of PMS that had both an English CSR and a discussion of that PMS in the relevant RER issued by the PMDA, which was subsequently translated into English by a professional translation vendor. Reexamination outcome is included in each RER and served to demonstrate the impact of the study of the benefit/risk profile of the drug.
    Results: A total of 79 PMS for 43 different drug products across therapy areas enrolled a total of 98,035 patients. The 79 PMS comprised 34 general drug use investigation (GDUI) studies and 45 special investigation (SI) studies. The primary analysis involved 37 PMS with a CSR and RER available in English (40,470 patients); all of which were observational in design. For 31 of 37 PMS, the RER concluded the overall adverse drug reaction (ADR) rate in the PMS was nominally lower than in the phase 3 program. Unlabeled ADRs were reported in 28 of 37 PMS; however, no new safety concerns requiring regulatory action arose from any PMS. The PMDA did not require additional risk minimization measures for any of the 43 drug products studied in any of the 79 PMS assessed. Japan PMS data were consistent with prior global data with no evidence of clinically meaningful differences in safety in Japanese patients. In all cases, the reexamination outcome was category 1 ("usefulness is confirmed").
    Conclusions: The reexamination process did not result in regulatory changes for any of the examined drugs. The Japan new-drug application (J-NDA) review and approval process, including implementation of the initial Japan product label, assures acceptable benefit/risk at the time of approval such that mandatory GDUI or SI studies for all products should be reconsidered. In the case of genuine scientific uncertainty to the extent that the benefit/risk of the product is not clear, a PMS is warranted.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-03-31
    Publishing country New Zealand
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2415165-8
    ISSN 1179-1993 ; 1178-2595
    ISSN (online) 1179-1993
    ISSN 1178-2595
    DOI 10.1007/s40290-024-00521-2
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Computational modeling of wastewater land application treatment systems to determine strategies to improve carbon and nitrogen removal.

    Dong, Younsuk / Safferman, Steven I / Pouyan Nejadhashemi, A

    Journal of environmental science and health. Part A, Toxic/hazardous substances & environmental engineering

    2019  Volume 54, Issue 7, Page(s) 657–667

    Abstract: Land application of domestic and food processing wastewater is used due to its low cost, energy use, and maintenance. Design procedures are generally based on empirical relationships that may not account for critical site and waste-specific conditions. A ...

    Abstract Land application of domestic and food processing wastewater is used due to its low cost, energy use, and maintenance. Design procedures are generally based on empirical relationships that may not account for critical site and waste-specific conditions. A mathematical model was utilized to simulate the complexity of wastewater land application. Multiple scenarios were run to determine system performance as measured by chemical oxygen demand (COD) and the nitrification/denitrification process. The modeling results showed that COD and nitrification occurred within the first 15.4 cm of a sandy loam soil. Increasing the dosing frequency slightly reduced the COD effluent concentration. Complete denitrification does not occur in a typical land application wastewater treatment system. In a domestic wastewater land application system, up to 32% of nitrate can be removed by increasing the dosing frequency and providing more organic carbon. In a food processing wastewater land application system, up to 56% of nitrate can be removed by increasing the dosing frequency and hydraulic and organic loadings. HYDRUS CW2D modeling is a valuable design tool to simulate multiple operation strategies and predict carbon degradation, nitrification, and denitrification. The model result can provide operational strategies to maximize the treatment while minimizing environmental impacts.
    MeSH term(s) Biological Oxygen Demand Analysis ; Carbon/analysis ; Computer Simulation ; Denitrification ; Models, Theoretical ; Nitrates/analysis ; Nitrification ; Nitrogen/analysis ; Soil/chemistry ; Waste Disposal, Fluid/methods ; Waste Water/chemistry
    Chemical Substances Nitrates ; Soil ; Waste Water ; Carbon (7440-44-0) ; Nitrogen (N762921K75)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-03-01
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 196584-0
    ISSN 1532-4117 ; 0360-1226 ; 1077-1204 ; 1093-4529
    ISSN (online) 1532-4117
    ISSN 0360-1226 ; 1077-1204 ; 1093-4529
    DOI 10.1080/10934529.2019.1579536
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Emergency Physician Twitter Use in the COVID-19 Pandemic as a Potential Predictor of Impending Surge: Retrospective Observational Study.

    Margus, Colton / Brown, Natasha / Hertelendy, Attila J / Safferman, Michelle R / Hart, Alexander / Ciottone, Gregory R

    Journal of medical Internet research

    2021  Volume 23, Issue 7, Page(s) e28615

    Abstract: Background: The early conversations on social media by emergency physicians offer a window into the ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic.: Objective: This retrospective observational study of emergency physician Twitter use details how the ... ...

    Abstract Background: The early conversations on social media by emergency physicians offer a window into the ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Objective: This retrospective observational study of emergency physician Twitter use details how the health care crisis has influenced emergency physician discourse online and how this discourse may have use as a harbinger of ensuing surge.
    Methods: Followers of the three main emergency physician professional organizations were identified using Twitter's application programming interface. They and their followers were included in the study if they identified explicitly as US-based emergency physicians. Statuses, or tweets, were obtained between January 4, 2020, when the new disease was first reported, and December 14, 2020, when vaccination first began. Original tweets underwent sentiment analysis using the previously validated Valence Aware Dictionary and Sentiment Reasoner (VADER) tool as well as topic modeling using latent Dirichlet allocation unsupervised machine learning. Sentiment and topic trends were then correlated with daily change in new COVID-19 cases and inpatient bed utilization.
    Results: A total of 3463 emergency physicians produced 334,747 unique English-language tweets during the study period. Out of 3463 participants, 910 (26.3%) stated that they were in training, and 466 of 902 (51.7%) participants who provided their gender identified as men. Overall tweet volume went from a pre-March 2020 mean of 481.9 (SD 72.7) daily tweets to a mean of 1065.5 (SD 257.3) daily tweets thereafter. Parameter and topic number tuning led to 20 tweet topics, with a topic coherence of 0.49. Except for a week in June and 4 days in November, discourse was dominated by the health care system (45,570/334,747, 13.6%). Discussion of pandemic response, epidemiology, and clinical care were jointly found to moderately correlate with COVID-19 hospital bed utilization (Pearson r=0.41), as was the occurrence of "covid," "coronavirus," or "pandemic" in tweet texts (r=0.47). Momentum in COVID-19 tweets, as demonstrated by a sustained crossing of 7- and 28-day moving averages, was found to have occurred on an average of 45.0 (SD 12.7) days before peak COVID-19 hospital bed utilization across the country and in the four most contributory states.
    Conclusions: COVID-19 Twitter discussion among emergency physicians correlates with and may precede the rising of hospital burden. This study, therefore, begins to depict the extent to which the ongoing pandemic has affected the field of emergency medicine discourse online and suggests a potential avenue for understanding predictors of surge.
    MeSH term(s) COVID-19/diagnosis ; COVID-19/epidemiology ; COVID-19 Vaccines/administration & dosage ; Communication ; Emergency Medicine ; Forecasting/methods ; Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data ; Hospitalization/trends ; Humans ; Latent Class Analysis ; Longitudinal Studies ; Pandemics ; Physicians ; Retrospective Studies ; SARS-CoV-2 ; Social Media/statistics & numerical data ; Vaccination/statistics & numerical data
    Chemical Substances COVID-19 Vaccines
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-07-14
    Publishing country Canada
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2028830-X
    ISSN 1438-8871 ; 1439-4456
    ISSN (online) 1438-8871
    ISSN 1439-4456
    DOI 10.2196/28615
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article: Field application of farmstead runoff to vegetated filter strips: surface and subsurface water quality assessment.

    Larson, Rebecca A / Safferman, Steven I

    Journal of environmental quality

    2012  Volume 41, Issue 2, Page(s) 592–603

    Abstract: Farmstead runoff poses significant environmental impacts to ground and surface waters. Three vegetated filter strips were assessed for the treatment of dairy farmstead runoff at the soil surface and subsurface at 0.3- or 0. 46-m and 0. 76-m depths for ... ...

    Abstract Farmstead runoff poses significant environmental impacts to ground and surface waters. Three vegetated filter strips were assessed for the treatment of dairy farmstead runoff at the soil surface and subsurface at 0.3- or 0. 46-m and 0. 76-m depths for numerous storm events. A medium-sized Michigan dairy was retrofitted with two filter strips on sandy loam soil and a third filter strip was implemented on a small Michigan dairy with sandy soil to collect and treat runoff from feed storage, manure storage, and other impervious farmstead areas. All filter strips were able to eliminate surface runoff via infiltration for all storm events over the duration of the study, eliminating pollutant contributions to surface water. Subsurface effluent was monitored to determine the contributing groundwater concentrations of numerous pollutants including chemical oxygen demand (COD), metals, and nitrates. Subsurface samples have an average reduction of COD concentrations of 20, 11, and 85% for the medium dairy Filter Strip 1 (FS1), medium dairy Filter Strip 2 (FS2), and the small Michigan dairy respectively, resulting in average subsurface concentrations of 355, 3960, and 718 mg L COD. Similar reductions were noted for ammonia and total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN) in the subsurface effluent. The small Michigan dairy was able to reduce the pollutant leachate concentrations of COD, TKN, and ammonia over a range of influent concentrations. Increased influent concentrations in the medium Michigan dairy filter strips resulted in an increase in COD, TKN, and ammonia concentrations in the leachate. Manganese was leached from the native soils at all filter strips as evidenced by the increase in manganese concentrations in the leachate. Nitrate concentrations were above standard drinking water limits (10 mg L), averaging subsurface concentrations of 11, 45, and 25 mg L NO-N for FS1, FS2, and the small Michigan dairy, respectively.
    MeSH term(s) Arsenic/analysis ; Arsenic/isolation & purification ; Arsenic/metabolism ; Groundwater/chemistry ; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ; Manganese/analysis ; Manganese/isolation & purification ; Manganese/metabolism ; Nitrogen/analysis ; Nitrogen/isolation & purification ; Nitrogen/metabolism ; Oxygen/chemistry ; Phosphorus/analysis ; Phosphorus/isolation & purification ; Phosphorus/metabolism ; Plants/metabolism ; Soil/chemistry ; Water/chemistry ; Water Quality
    Chemical Substances Soil ; Water (059QF0KO0R) ; Phosphorus (27YLU75U4W) ; Manganese (42Z2K6ZL8P) ; Arsenic (N712M78A8G) ; Nitrogen (N762921K75) ; Oxygen (S88TT14065)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2012-03
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 120525-0
    ISSN 1537-2537 ; 0047-2425
    ISSN (online) 1537-2537
    ISSN 0047-2425
    DOI 10.2134/jeq2011.0125
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article: Computational modeling of wastewater land application treatment systems to determine strategies to improve carbon and nitrogen removal

    Dong, Younsuk / Safferman, Steven I / Pouyan Nejadhashemi, A

    Journal of environmental science and health. 2019 June 7, v. 54, no. 7

    2019  

    Abstract: Land application of domestic and food processing wastewater is used due to its low cost, energy use, and maintenance. Design procedures are generally based on empirical relationships that may not account for critical site and waste-specific conditions. A ...

    Abstract Land application of domestic and food processing wastewater is used due to its low cost, energy use, and maintenance. Design procedures are generally based on empirical relationships that may not account for critical site and waste-specific conditions. A mathematical model was utilized to simulate the complexity of wastewater land application. Multiple scenarios were run to determine system performance as measured by chemical oxygen demand (COD) and the nitrification/denitrification process. The modeling results showed that COD and nitrification occurred within the first 15.4 cm of a sandy loam soil. Increasing the dosing frequency slightly reduced the COD effluent concentration. Complete denitrification does not occur in a typical land application wastewater treatment system. In a domestic wastewater land application system, up to 32% of nitrate can be removed by increasing the dosing frequency and providing more organic carbon. In a food processing wastewater land application system, up to 56% of nitrate can be removed by increasing the dosing frequency and hydraulic and organic loadings. HYDRUS CW2D modeling is a valuable design tool to simulate multiple operation strategies and predict carbon degradation, nitrification, and denitrification. The model result can provide operational strategies to maximize the treatment while minimizing environmental impacts.
    Keywords chemical oxygen demand ; denitrification ; energy ; environmental impact ; food processing ; land application ; mathematical models ; municipal wastewater ; nitrates ; nitrification ; nitrogen ; organic carbon ; sandy loam soils ; wastewater treatment
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2019-0607
    Size p. 657-667.
    Publishing place Taylor & Francis
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 196584-0
    ISSN 1532-4117 ; 0360-1226 ; 1077-1204 ; 1093-4529
    ISSN (online) 1532-4117
    ISSN 0360-1226 ; 1077-1204 ; 1093-4529
    DOI 10.1080/10934529.2019.1579536
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  6. Article: Field Application of Farmstead Runoff to Vegetated Filter Strips: Surface and Subsurface Water Quality Assessment

    Larson, Rebecca A / Safferman, Steven I

    Journal of environmental quality. 2012 Mar., v. 41, no. 2

    2012  

    Abstract: Farmstead runoff poses significant environmental impacts to ground and surface waters. Three vegetated filter strips were assessed for the treatment of dairy farmstead runoff at the soil surface and subsurface at 0.3- or 0. 46-m and 0. 76-m depths for ... ...

    Abstract Farmstead runoff poses significant environmental impacts to ground and surface waters. Three vegetated filter strips were assessed for the treatment of dairy farmstead runoff at the soil surface and subsurface at 0.3- or 0. 46-m and 0. 76-m depths for numerous storm events. A medium-sized Michigan dairy was retrofitted with two filter strips on sandy loam soil and a third filter strip was implemented on a small Michigan dairy with sandy soil to collect and treat runoff from feed storage, manure storage, and other impervious farmstead areas. All filter strips were able to eliminate surface runoff via infiltration for all storm events over the duration of the study, eliminating pollutant contributions to surface water. Subsurface effluent was monitored to determine the contributing groundwater concentrations of numerous pollutants including chemical oxygen demand (COD), metals, and nitrates. Subsurface samples have an average reduction of COD concentrations of 20, 11, and 85% for the medium dairy Filter Strip 1 (FS1), medium dairy Filter Strip 2 (FS2), and the small Michigan dairy respectively, resulting in average subsurface concentrations of 355, 3960, and 718 mg L−1 COD. Similar reductions were noted for ammonia and total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN) in the subsurface effluent. The small Michigan dairy was able to reduce the pollutant leachate concentrations of COD, TKN, and ammonia over a range of influent concentrations. Increased influent concentrations in the medium Michigan dairy filter strips resulted in an increase in COD, TKN, and ammonia concentrations in the leachate. Manganese was leached from the native soils at all filter strips as evidenced by the increase in manganese concentrations in the leachate. Nitrate concentrations were above standard drinking water limits (10 mg L−1), averaging subsurface concentrations of 11, 45, and 25 mg L−1 NO3–N for FS1, FS2, and the small Michigan dairy, respectively.
    Keywords ammonia ; chemical oxygen demand ; drinking water ; environmental impact ; filter strips ; groundwater ; manganese ; manure storage ; nitrate nitrogen ; nitrates ; pollutants ; runoff ; sandy loam soils ; sandy soils ; storms ; surface water ; water quality ; Michigan
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2012-03
    Size p. 592-603.
    Publishing place The American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America, Inc.
    Document type Article
    Note epub
    ZDB-ID 120525-0
    ISSN 1537-2537 ; 0047-2425
    ISSN (online) 1537-2537
    ISSN 0047-2425
    DOI 10.2134/jeq2011.0125
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  7. Article: Cellulitis, eosinophilia, and unilateral pleural effusion associated with clozapine treatment.

    Chatterjee, A / Safferman, A Z

    Journal of clinical psychopharmacology

    1997  Volume 17, Issue 3, Page(s) 232–233

    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Antipsychotic Agents/adverse effects ; Cellulitis/chemically induced ; Clozapine/adverse effects ; Eosinophilia/chemically induced ; Humans ; Male ; Pleural Effusion/chemically induced ; Psychotic Disorders/drug therapy
    Chemical Substances Antipsychotic Agents ; Clozapine (J60AR2IKIC)
    Language English
    Publishing date 1997-06
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Case Reports ; Letter
    ZDB-ID 604631-9
    ISSN 1533-712X ; 0271-0749
    ISSN (online) 1533-712X
    ISSN 0271-0749
    DOI 10.1097/00004714-199706000-00022
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article: Carbon and nutrient removal from on-site wastewater using extended-aeration activated sludge and ion exchange.

    Safferman, Steven I / Burks, Bennette D / Parker, Robert A

    Water environment research : a research publication of the Water Environment Federation

    2004  Volume 76, Issue 5, Page(s) 404–412

    Abstract: The need to improve on-site wastewater treatment processes is being realized as populations move into more environmentally sensitive regions and regulators adopt the total maximum daily load approach to watershed management. Under many conditions, septic ...

    Abstract The need to improve on-site wastewater treatment processes is being realized as populations move into more environmentally sensitive regions and regulators adopt the total maximum daily load approach to watershed management. Under many conditions, septic systems do not provide adequate treatment; therefore, advanced systems are required. These systems must remove significant amounts of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and suspended solids, and substantially nitrify, denitrify, and remove phosphorus. Many existing advanced on-site wastewater systems effectively remove BOD, suspended solids, and ammonia, but few substantially denitrify and uptake phosphorus. The purpose of this research was to design and test modifications to an existing on-site wastewater treatment system to improve denitrification and phosphorus removal. The Nayadic (Consolidated Treatment Systems, Inc., Franklin, Ohio), an established, commercially available, extended-aeration, activated sludge process, was used to represent a typical existing system. Several modifications were considered based on a literature review, and the option with the best potential was tested. To improve denitrification, a supplemental treatment tank was installed before the Nayadic and a combination flow splitter, sump, and pump box with a recirculation system was installed after it. A recirculation pump returned a high proportion of the system effluent back to the supplemental treatment tank. Two supplemental treatment tank sizes, three flowrates, and three recirculation rates were tested. Actual wastewater was dosed as brief slugs to the system in accordance with a set schedule. Several ion-exchange resins housed in a contact column were tested on the effluent for their potential to remove phosphorus. Low effluent levels of five-day biochemical oxygen demand, suspended solids, and total nitrogen were achieved and substantial phosphorous removal was also achieved using a 3780-L supplemental treatment tank, a recirculation ratio of 5:1, and a fine-grain activated aluminum-oxide-exchange media. Good results were also obtained with an 1890-L supplemental treatment tank and a recirculation ratio of 3:1. The most significant benefit of the supplemental treatment tank, in combination with the recirculation system, appears to be the low nitrogen concentration dosed to the Nayadic. By reducing the nitrogen concentration and spreading out its mass over time during no-flow periods, the Nayadic's inherent low-level denitrifying capacity was more closely matched and effective treatment was achieved.
    MeSH term(s) Aluminum/chemistry ; Carbon/isolation & purification ; Ion Exchange ; Nitrogen/isolation & purification ; Phosphorus/isolation & purification ; Sewage/chemistry ; Sewage/microbiology ; Waste Disposal, Fluid/methods ; Water Movements ; Water Purification/methods
    Chemical Substances Sewage ; Phosphorus (27YLU75U4W) ; Carbon (7440-44-0) ; Aluminum (CPD4NFA903) ; Nitrogen (N762921K75)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2004-09-16
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1098976-6
    ISSN 1554-7531 ; 1061-4303 ; 1047-7624
    ISSN (online) 1554-7531
    ISSN 1061-4303 ; 1047-7624
    DOI 10.2175/106143004x151671
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article: Passive nutrient addition for the biodegradation of ethylene glycol in storm water.

    Safferman, Steven I / Azar, Roger A / Sigler, Stephanie

    Journal of environmental science and health. Part A, Toxic/hazardous substances & environmental engineering

    2003  Volume 37, Issue 5, Page(s) 955–967

    Abstract: This laboratory proof-of-concept research examined the feasibility of adding solid, slow-release macronutrients to a biofilm reactor system to achieve the effective biodegradation of a predominately organic polluted storm water. The target scenario was ... ...

    Abstract This laboratory proof-of-concept research examined the feasibility of adding solid, slow-release macronutrients to a biofilm reactor system to achieve the effective biodegradation of a predominately organic polluted storm water. The target scenario was treating ethylene glycol in storm water, representing the runoff of airport deicing and anti-icing fluids. However, the results can also be generalized for any water polluted with a predominately carbonaceous material. The use of a solid, slow-release nutrient source, compared to amending with a soluble solution in proportion to influent flow, would be ideal for storm water applications and other specialized wastewater flows when maintenance requirements and operational support must be minimized. Several commercially available fertilizers were preliminarily examined to determine which had the best potential to provide the required amount of nutrients. A time-released, polymer-coated granular fertilizer was ultimately selected. Based on laboratory studies, it was found that this fertilizer could provide a controllable source of macronutrients that enabled treatment to a similar degree as if the macronutrients had been dissolved in the influent. The only major operational problem was reduced nutrient delivery from the fertilizer after it became coated with a thick biofilm. However, the inherent intermittent nature of storm water production resulting in wet/dry cycles may minimize the development of a thick biofilm.
    MeSH term(s) Biodegradation, Environmental ; Biofilms ; Bioreactors ; Ethylene Glycol/metabolism ; Fertilizers ; Nitrogen/metabolism ; Phosphorus/metabolism ; Polymers ; Rain ; Water Movements ; Water Pollutants, Chemical/metabolism
    Chemical Substances Fertilizers ; Polymers ; Water Pollutants, Chemical ; Phosphorus (27YLU75U4W) ; Ethylene Glycol (FC72KVT52F) ; Nitrogen (N762921K75)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2003-02-21
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 196584-0
    ISSN 1532-4117 ; 1093-4529 ; 0360-1226 ; 1077-1204
    ISSN (online) 1532-4117
    ISSN 1093-4529 ; 0360-1226 ; 1077-1204
    DOI 10.1081/ese-120003600
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article: Maximizing total nitrogen removal from onsite-generated wastewater.

    Safferman, Steven I / Novellino, Marianna I / Burks, Bennette D / Parker, Robert A

    Journal of environmental health

    2006  Volume 68, Issue 6, Page(s) 25–32

    Abstract: The research reported here examined the use of hydraulic loading strategies to maximize nitrogen removal from onsite-generated wastewater. These strategies are made practical by the inherently intermittent flow of onsite-generated wastewater. ... ...

    Abstract The research reported here examined the use of hydraulic loading strategies to maximize nitrogen removal from onsite-generated wastewater. These strategies are made practical by the inherently intermittent flow of onsite-generated wastewater. Experimentation was conducted at the Western Regional Wastewater Pretreatment Facility in Montgomery County, Ohio, with an established, full-scale onsite wastewater treatment system rated at 500 gallons per day. The onsite wastewater treatment unit was fed primarily with domestic wastewater that had passed through fine screens and grit removal. The dosing schedule was intermittent, representing what would be expected from onsite-generated wastewater. Oxidation occurred in the aeration tank and potentially on the solid-liquid filtration socks within the aeration tank. All major wastewater characterization parameters were monitored during the approximately one-year study, including five-day biochemical oxygen demand (BOD;), total suspended solids (TSS), nitrate, total nitrogen, pH, and alkalinity. Excellent removal of BOD5 and TSS resulted, with the effluent concentration of each parameter substantially and consistently below 10 mg/L for all operating conditions. Excellent total nitrogen removal occurred, typically to below 10 mg/L of nitrogen when the instantaneous flow of wastewater was low, even when the daily hydraulic loading was high. The removal of nitrogen was attributed to microbial biodegradation. This result indicates that the onsite wastewater treatment unit has an inherent denitrification capacity that can be matched with an equalized-hydraulic-loading strategy. The practical ability to equalize and reduce instantaneous loading results from the inherently intermittent nature of the flow associated with onsite wastewater treatment.
    MeSH term(s) Filtration ; Nitrogen/isolation & purification ; Oxidation-Reduction ; Waste Disposal, Fluid/methods ; Water Movements ; Water Supply
    Chemical Substances Nitrogen (N762921K75)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2006-01
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 411432-2
    ISSN 0022-0892
    ISSN 0022-0892
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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