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Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2016-Oct

Cross-shift study of exposure-response relationships between bioaerosol exposure and respiratory effects in the Norwegian grain and animal feed production industry.

Watumiaji waliosajiliwa tu ndio wanaweza kutafsiri nakala
Ingia / Ingia
Kiungo kimehifadhiwa kwenye clipboard
Anne Straumfors
Kari Kulvik Heldal
Wijnand Eduard
Inge M Wouters
Dag G Ellingsen
Marit Skogstad

Maneno muhimu

Kikemikali

OBJECTIVE

We have studied cross-shift respiratory responses of several individual bioaerosol components of the dust in the grain and feed industry in Norway.

METHODS

Cross-shift changes in lung function and nasal congestion, as well as in respiratory and systemic symptoms of 56 exposed workers and 36 referents, were recorded on the same day as full-shift exposure to the inhalable aerosol fraction was assessed. Exposure-response associations were investigated by regression analysis.

RESULTS

The workers were exposed on average to 1.0 mg/m(3) of grain dust, 440 EU/m(3) of endotoxin, 6 µg/m(3) of β-1,3-glucans, 17×10(4)/m(3) of bacteria and 4×10(4)/m(3) of fungal spores during work. The exposure was associated with higher prevalence of self-reported eye and airway symptoms, which were related to the individual microbial components in a complex manner. Fatigue and nose symptoms were strongest associated with fungal spores, cough with or without phlegm was associated with grain dust and fungal spores equally strong and wheeze/tight chest/dyspnoea was strongest associated with grain dust. Bioaerosol exposure did not lead to cross-shift lung function decline, but several microbial components had influence on nose congestion.

CONCLUSIONS

Exposure to fungal spores and dust showed stronger associations with respiratory symptoms and fatigue than endotoxin exposure. The associations with dust suggest that there are other components in dust than the ones studied that induce these effects.

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