| Literature DB >> 16002378 |
Judith Green-McKenzie1, Debra Hudes.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Latex allergy and sensitization have been an important problem facing health care workers. Providing a latex-safe environment is the intervention of choice. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16002378 PMCID: PMC1257651 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.7830
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
The chronological relationship between the patient’s occupational exposure and the appearance of symptoms.
| Year | Occupation | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| 1977 | Medical student | Rash on dorsum of hands with latex glove use; does not clear with steroid use |
| 1979 | Internal medicine resident | Continued rash on dorsum of hands with latex glove use |
| 1984 | Pathology resident | Rash on hands and arms, urticaria, wheezing, chest tightness, chronic cough |
| 1987 | Surgical pathologist | Diagnosed with nasal polyps |
| 1993 | Surgical pathologist | Notes dyspnea within 30 min of work and with coughing and laughing |
| 1996 | Surgical pathologist | Allergist evaluation results in diagnosis of asthma and allergic rhinitis; emergency department evaluation results in diagnosis of “near syncope” after he flipped off gloves and covered mouth and nose with hands |
| 1997 | Surgical pathologist | Presents to our clinic with single flight dyspnea; removed from workplace because no reasonable accommodation made at work |
Spirometry results before and after bronchodilator use showing FEV1 and FVC.
| Prebronchodilator | Percent predicted | Postbronchodilator | Percent predicted | Percent change | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FEV1 (L) | 2.65 | 67 | 2.98 | 75 | 13 |
| FVC (L) | 3.96 | 81 | 4.47 | 91 | 13 |
| FEV1/FVC | 67 | — | 67 | — | — |
Abbreviations: FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 sec; FVC, forced vital capacity.
Mean morning and evening PEFRs while at work and during vacation, measured in the morning and in the evening at bedtime both before using asthma medication.
| Mean PEFR
| |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Time | Work | Vacation | Percent increase |
| Morning (L/min) | 368 | 443 | 20 |
| Evening (L/min) | 361 | 441 | 22 |
| Percent increase | −2 | −0.5 | — |
| PEFR range (L/min) | 320–425 | 340–550 | — |
Figure 1The patient’s morning and evening PEFRs recorded in 1997 on 11 consecutive days while at work (Sunday, 2 November, through Wednesday, 12 November) and on 6 consecutive days while on vacation (Wednesday, 13 November, through Tuesday, 18 November).