Exposure monitoring and health effect studies of workers occupationally exposed to cyclohexane vapor.

Autor: Yasugi, Tomojiro, Kawai, Toshio, Mizunuma, Kazunori, Kishi, Reiko, Harabuchi, Izumi, Yuasa, Junko, Eguchi, Teruko, Sugimoto, Ryoichi, Seiji, Kazunori, Ikeda, Masayuki
Zdroj: International Archives of Occupational & Environmental Health; 1994, Vol. 65 Issue 5, p343-350, 8p
Abstrakt: A survey was conducted in the second half of a working week on 33 women who either applied glue (with cyclohexane as an almost exclusive solvent component) or worked in the vicinity of glue application. Carbon cloth-equipped diffusive samplers were used for personal measurement of time-weighted average intensity of exposure to the solvent. The geometric mean and the highest cyclohexane concentration observed in air were 27 ppm and 274 ppm, respectively. Concentrations of cyclohexanol in urine samples and cyclohexane in whole blood and serum collected at the end of a shift showed significant correlations with the solvent exposure levels. Urinary cyclohexanone also correlated, but with a smaller correlation coefficient. The observation suggests that cyclohexanol in urine and cyclohexane in blood or serum collected at the end of a shift are useful indicators of occupational exposure to cyclohexane vapor. Quantitative estimation of balance at the end of the shift suggested that only a minute portion (< 1%) of cyclohexane absorbed is excreted in the urine as cyclohexanol, almost exclusively as a glucuronide. A survey of subjective symptoms revealed an increase in the prevalence of 'dimmed vision' and 'unusual smell', but hematology and serum biochemistry testing did not indicate any specific signs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index