Summary of the 1989 EPA/A&WMA International symposium: measurement of toxic and related air pollutants.
Jayanty. R K RK; Hochheiser. S S
Key Findings
- The symposium focused on techniques for detecting toxic and related air pollutants.
- It featured 145 presentations across 14 technical sessions.
- Over 700 scientists and professionals attended, with 57 companies showcasing equipment.
Practical Outcomes
- There are no practical takeaways for using selank or improving health. The content is unrelated to peptide dosing, mechanisms, or performance benefits for the target community.
Summary
The abstract describes a 1989 conference about measuring air pollutants, not about the peptide selank or any health‑related effects. It talks about presentations, exhibitors, and attendees at the symposium, which isn’t useful for biohackers looking for actionable peptide information.
Abstract
A joint conference, for the fourth straight year cosponsored by the Air & Waste Management Association's TP-6, TP-7, and ITF-2 technical committees, and the Atmospheric Research and Exposure Assessment Laboratory of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, was held at Raleigh, North Carolina, May 2-5, 1989. The technical program consisted of 145 presentations, held in 14 separate technical sessions, on recent advances in the measurement and monitoring of toxic and related pollutants found in ambient and source atmospheres. Covering a wide range of measurement topics and superbly supported by 57 exhibitors of instrumentation and consulting services, the symposium was enthusiastically received by more than 700 attendees from the United States and other countries. This overview contains a selection of the highlights from the technical presentations. A synopsis of the keynote address to the symposium is also included.
Study Information
pubmed
1989
1989-11-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1080/08940630.1989.10466634