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Biological monitoring of exposure to perchloroethylene in dry cleaning workers.

Authors :
Macca I
Carrieri M
Scapellato ML
Scopa P
Trevisan A
Bartolucci GB
Source :
La Medicina del lavoro [Med Lav] 2012 Sep-Oct; Vol. 103 (5), pp. 382-93.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background: Perchloroethylene (PCE) is the most widely used solvent in dry cleaning.<br />Objectives: The aim was to evaluate PCE pollution and to identify the most reliable biological indicators for the assessment of workers' exposure.<br />Methods: The study was performed in 40 dry cleaning shops covering a total of 71 subjects. Environmental monitoring was carried out with personal diffusive samplers (Radiello) for the entire work shift; biological monitoring was performed by measuring PCE in urine and blood and trichloroacetic acid (TCA) in urine on Thursday evening at end-of shift and on Friday morning pre-shift.<br />Results: The mean concentration of PCE in air was 52.32 mg/m3, about 30% of the TLV-TWA and the mean value of the PCE inpre-shift blood samples was 0.304 mg/l, slightly more than 50% of the BEI. In dry cleaning shops employing less than 3 persons PCE in air exceeded the TLV-TWA in 7.8% of cases; the size of the shops was inversely related to pollution. Statistically significant correlations were found between PCE exposure and PCE in blood end-of-shift (r = 0.67) and pre-shift (r = 0.70), and PCE in urine end-of-shift (r = 0.68); no correlation was found between exposure and PCE in urine pre-shift and urinary TCA.<br />Conclusions: Dry cleaning shops still register conditions of exposure and pollution by PCE, although to a lesser extent than in the past. The most reliable indicators for biological monitoring are CE in end-of-shift urine and PCE in blood both at end-of-shift and pre-shift at the end of the workweek.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0025-7818
Volume :
103
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
La Medicina del lavoro
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23077798