Autor: |
Brugnone, F., Perbellini, L., Cerpelloni, M., Soave, C., Cecco, A., Giuliari, C. |
Zdroj: |
International Archives of Occupational & Environmental Health; 1996, Vol. 68 Issue 1, p22-26, 5p |
Abstrakt: |
Nitrous oxide (NO) was assayed in 676 urine samples and 101 blood samples provided after exposure by operating theatre personnel from nine hospitals. The blood and urine assays were repeated in 25 subjects 18 h after the end of exposure. For 80 subjects, environmental NO was also measured during intraoperative exposure. Mean urinary NO in the 676 subjects at the end of exposure was 40 μg/l (range 1-3805 μg/l); in 10 of the 676 subjects, urinary NO was in the range 279-3805 μg/l (mean 1202 μ/l). The 98 percentile was 120 μg/l. Mean blood NO at the end of exposure, measured in 101 subjects, was 21 μg/l (median 16 μg/l, range 1-75 μg/l). Blood and urine NO (1.5 μg/l and 4.9 μg/l, respectively) in 25 subjects, 18 h after exposure, was significantly higher than in occupationally non-exposed subjects (blood 0.91 μg/l, urine 1 μg/l). Environmental exposure was significantly related to blood and urinary NO ( r = 0.59 and r = 0.64, respectively). Blood and urinary NO were significantly related to each other ( r = 0.71), and were equivalent to about 25% of the environmental exposure level. The mean urinary NO of 1202 μg/l in 10/676 subjects was not related to environmental exposure in the operating theatre. The highest urinary NO levels measured in these 10/676 subjects could be explained by an asymptomatic urinary infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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