Application of End-Exhaled Breath Monitoring to Assess Carbon Monoxide Exposures of Wildland Firefighters at Prescribed Burns
Autor: | Allison Stock, Luke P. Naeher, Kevin H. Dunn, Isabelle Devaux |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Biological test
medicine.medical_specialty Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis Population Monitoring Ambulatory Toxicology Fires Decreased lung function chemistry.chemical_compound Occupational Exposure Smoke medicine Humans education Carbon Monoxide Inhalation Exposure education.field_of_study Chemistry Prescribed burn Exhalation Forestry Smoke Inhalation Injury Breath Tests Carboxyhemoglobin Combustion products Emergency medicine Regression Analysis Carbon monoxide |
Zdroj: | Inhalation Toxicology. 21:55-61 |
ISSN: | 1091-7691 0895-8378 |
DOI: | 10.1080/08958370802207300 |
Popis: | Exposure to the range of combustion products from wildland fires has been demonstrated to cause respiratory irritation and decreased lung function among firefighters. The measurement of carbon monoxide (CO) has been previously shown to be highly correlated with the range of contaminants found in wildland fires. In this article, we assess the feasibility of using a simple, noninvasive biological test to assess exposure to CO for a group of wildland firefighters. Measurements of CO exposure were collected using personal monitors as well as in exhaled breath for wildland firefighters who conducted prescribed burns in February-March 2004. Overall, the CO concentrations measured in this study group were low with a shift mean of 1.87 ppm. Correspondingly, the cross-shift difference in carboxyhemoglobin as estimated from exhaled breath CO levels was also low (median increase =+0.2% carboxyhemoglobin). The use of exhaled breath measurements for CO has limitations in characterizing exposures within this worker population. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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