Articles

Formaldehyde Exposure and Irritative Effects on Medical Examiners, Pathologic Anatomy Post-Graduate Students and Technicians

Abstract

Background: Exposure to formaldehyde (FA) causes irritative effects and induces nasopharyngeal cancer; the Interna­tional Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC, Lyon) classified FA as carcinogenic to humans, Group 1. Many studies have been published so far concerning the occupational exposure of industrial workers, embalmers, pathologists and anatomists to FA but very few data regarding medical examiners are available.
Methods: To assess the extent to which subjects were exposed to FA, airborne concentrations of this chemical were measured by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). In September-October 2006 we examined the person­nel, which worked in an autopsy room (medical examiners) and in three laboratories of pathologic anatomy of the Uni­versity Medical School of Bari, Policlinico Hospital, Southern Italy. Irritative effects were also investigated.
Results: All the personal exposure data obtained exceeded the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Threshold Limit Value-Time Weighted Average (NIOSH TLV-TWA: 0.02 mg/m3) and, in a few cases, even the Ameri­can Conference of Industrial Hygienists Threshold Limit Value-Ceiling level (ACGIH TLV-C: 0.37 mg/m3).
Conclusion: Irritative effects in more than 50% of the workers enrolled, increasing the risk of injuries.

 

Files
IssueVol 39 No 4 (2010) QRcode
SectionArticles
Keywords
Occupational exposure Formaldehyde Air sampling Occupational Health

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Vimercati L, Carrus A, Martino T, Galise I, Minunni V, Caputo F, Dell’Erba A, Assennato G. Formaldehyde Exposure and Irritative Effects on Medical Examiners, Pathologic Anatomy Post-Graduate Students and Technicians. Iran J Public Health. 1;39(4):26-34.