Literature DB >> 10432869

Determinants of exposure to inhalable particulate, wood dust, resin acids, and monoterpenes in a lumber mill environment.

K Teschke1, P A Demers, H W Davies, S M Kennedy, S A Marion, V Leung.   

Abstract

In a lumber mill in the northern inland region of British Columbia, Canada, we measured inhalable particulate, resin acid, and monoterpene exposures, and estimated wood dust exposures. Potential determinants of exposure were documented concurrently, including weather conditions, tree species, wood conditions, jobs, tasks, equipment used, and certain control measures. Over 220 personal samples were taken for each contaminant. Geometric mean concentrations were 0.98 mg/m3 for inhalable particulate, 0.49 mg/m3 for estimated wood dust, 8.04 micrograms/m3 for total resin acids, and 1.11 mg/m3 for total monoterpenes. Multiple regression models for all contaminants indicated that spruce and pine produced higher exposures than alpine fir or mixed tree species, cleaning up sawdust increased exposures, and personnel enclosure was an effective means of reducing exposures. Sawing wood in the primary breakdown areas of the mill was the main contributor to monoterpene exposures, so exposures were highest for the barker operator, the head rig operator, the canter operator, the board edgers, and a roving utility worker in the sawmill, and lowest in the planer mills (after kiln drying of the lumber) and yard. Cleaning up sawdust, planing kiln-dried lumber, and driving mobile equipment in the yard substantially increased exposures to both inhalable particulate and estimated wood dust. Jobs at the front end of the sawmill where primary breakdown of the logs takes place had lower exposures. Resin acid exposures followed a similar pattern, except that yard driving jobs did not increase exposures.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10432869

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg        ISSN: 0003-4878


  11 in total

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5.  Occupational exposure to formaldehyde and wood dust and nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

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Review 6.  Association between Occupational Exposure to Wood Dust and Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-07-20       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  The Effect of Wood Aerosols and Bioaerosols on the Respiratory Systems of Wood Manufacturing Industry Workers in Golestan Province.

Authors:  Phateme Badirdast; Mansour Rezazadeh Azari; Soussan Salehpour; Ali Ghadjari; Soheila Khodakarim; Davod Panahi; Moslem Fadaei; Abolfazl Rahimi
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8.  Exposure to Wood Dust, Microbial Components, and Terpenes in the Norwegian Sawmill Industry.

Authors:  Anne Straumfors; Raymond Olsen; Hanne Line Daae; Anani Afanou; Dave McLean; Marine Corbin; Andrea 't Mannetje; Bente Ulvestad; Berit Bakke; Helle Laier Johnsen; Jeroen Douwes; Wijnand Eduard
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9.  Determinants of wood dust exposure in the Danish furniture industry--results from two cross-sectional studies 6 years apart.

Authors:  Vivi Schlünssen; Gitte Jacobsen; Mogens Erlandsen; Anders B Mikkelsen; Inger Schaumburg; Torben Sigsgaard
Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  2008-04-11

10.  Exposure Determinants of Wood Dust, Microbial Components, Resin Acids and Terpenes in the Saw- and Planer Mill Industry.

Authors:  Anne Straumfors; Marine Corbin; Dave McLean; Andrea 't Mannetje; Raymond Olsen; Anani Afanou; Hanne-Line Daae; Øivind Skare; Bente Ulvestad; Helle Laier Johnsen; Wijnand Eduard; Jeroen Douwes
Journal:  Ann Work Expo Health       Date:  2020-03-10       Impact factor: 2.179

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