| Literature DB >> 25495528 |
Stefan Kloth, Xaver Baur, Thomas Göen, Lygia Therese Budnik1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: International phytosanitary standards ISPM 15 require (since 2007) fumigation or heat treatment for shipping and storage. Those dealing with fumigated freight might be accidentally exposed. In this paper we report a series of three accidents of six storage room workers in a medium sized company regularly importing electronic production parts from abroad.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25495528 PMCID: PMC4320564 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-13-110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Case description and demographic data
|
| Six storage room workers were exposed to fumigants off gassing from shifted items in a medium sized European company importing electronic construction parts from Mexico and China. The exposures occurred three times (2010-2012), as reported by the patients. 48 hours after the first incidence a contracted industrial physician took blood samples and sent them to the clinical chemistry laboratory (Serum/EDTA blood, NaF blood) and sent samples to the commercial clinical chemistry laboratory to investigate intoxication parameters. Since no other information was provided to the laboratory, only a differential blood analysis was performed, no bromide,methyl bromide or other intoxication parameters were measured. As usual in such a case the blood samples were destroyed. Since two patients had persistent symptoms, the governmental industrial hygienist visited the company. He took air samples in the space between the delivered boxes; the laboratory analysis revealed 2.5-200 ppm residual methyl bromide. One year later, a second accident occurred involving the same employees. Ambient monitoring was performed, which showed the presence of methyl bromide and ethylene oxide in the air. Five days after the accident samples for biomonitoring (BM 2) were collected. |
|
| The accidents occurred between 2010 and 2012. For the BM No. 1, the samples were taken 195 days after the first and 111 days after the second accident. For the BM No. 2, the biomonitoring samples were collected five days after the third accident; BM No 3. (follow up) was initiated 178 days after the third accident (2013). |
|
| Exposed individuals: Patients 1-6 (aged: 32-54; 4 f, 2 m) |
| Patient 1 (47, f); patient 2 (32,m); patient 3 (39, f); patient 4 (41,m); patient 5 (54, f); patient 6 (38, f). | |
| All patients worked 8 hours each working day in a storage space where patients 1,3,4,5 and 6 unloaded the delivered items on a regular basis, unpacked wooden pellets with paper boxes covered with plastic (containing with construction parts) and distributed the construction parts for the production line. Patient 2 supervised the working place. | |
|
| After each incident the workers (patients 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6) noticed itchy skin, very red eyes and suffered from recurrent epistaxis, headaches and acrotaxia. After the second accident four individuals (Pat. 1, 3, 4 and 5) additionally complained about paresthesia (pins and needles in the legs), dizziness, breathing difficulties and increasing irritability. After the third accident, patient 4 was on sick leave for several weeks; patients 1 and 3 developed immediate epistaxis with a severe headache. |
|
| Workplace: Medium sized company, which recently turned into a worldwide operating logistics unit with production and distribution centers, but no internal industrial hygiene unit. The 6 patients were working in a storage room. They were unloading ca. 2 overseas containers per week at the time of the incidence. According to the interviews the containers were not labeled for fumigants; No air monitoring was performed on a regular basis, though the workers sometimes perceived strange odors. The delivered production parts were packed in several boxes on wooden pellets wrapped with a plastic foil. The workers were responsible for unloading and distributing the delivered items into several separate areas on several different floors. |
Human biomonitoring performed after the second and third incident (BM1, BM2), for details see Table 1
| Pat. | Bromide [μg/L] | Methyl bromide [μg/L] | Ethylene oxide [μg/L] | Ethylene dichloride [μg/L] | Dichloro-methane [μg/L] | Methanol [mg/L] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BM1 | BM2 | BM1 | BM2 | BM2 | BM2 | BM2 | BM1 | BM2 | BM1 | BM2 | |
|
| 2.8 |
| <LOD | <LOD |
| <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD |
|
| 2.5 |
| <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD |
| <LOD |
|
| 2.8 |
| <LOD | <LOD |
| <LOD | <LOD | 0.51 | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD |
|
| 1.7 |
| <LOD | <LOD |
| <LOD | <LOD | <LOD |
| <LOD | <LOD |
|
|
|
| <LOD | 0.241 |
| <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD |
|
| 3.1 |
| <LOD | <LOD |
| <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | 0.67 | <LOD |
|
| 3.8 | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | |
|
| 5 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |||
The data show measurements of bromide (serum) and methyl bromide, ethylene oxide, ethylene dichloride, dichloromethane and methanol in whole blood samples. The bold data, indicate for values higher than the references. For details see Methods.
Con. = controls (n = 30); n.d. not determined; Ref. DFG = reference values available from the Senate Commission of the German Research Council [DFG, 2012].
Biomonitoring for hemoglobin adducts MEV, HEV and CEV as well as for cotinine: BM1; BM2, BM3
| Pat. | MEV [pmol/g globin] | HEV [pmol/g globin] | CEV [pmol/g globin] | Cotinine [μg/g Crea.] | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BM1 | BM2 | BM3 | BM1 | BM2 | BM3 | BM1 | BM2 | BM3 | BM1 | BM2 | BM3 | |
|
| 453 | 447 | -2 | 26 | 46 | -2 | 01 | 01 | -2 | 1 | 01 | -2 |
|
|
|
| -2 | 36 | 34 | -2 | 01 | 01 | -2 | 2 | 8 | -2 |
|
|
| 388 | -2 | 132 | 54 | -2 | 70 | 31 | -2 | 1469 | 1169 | -2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 162 | 150 | 245 | 5049 | 3894 | 2902 |
|
| 518 |
|
| 140 |
|
| 26 | 62 | 91 | 196 | 1182 | 1390 |
|
| 450 | 459 | -2 | 115 | 107 | -2 | 48 | 46 | -2 | 1404 | 1409 | -2 |
|
| NS 452 | NS 43 | NS <2 | NS < 10/ | ||||||||
| S 539 | S 132 | S150 | S >100 | |||||||||
| Ref. | NS 320 | NS < 75 | NS <20 | NS < 10/ | ||||||||
| S 390 | S 150 | S 150 | S >100 | |||||||||
1under limit of detection, 2samples not provided. The bold data, indicate for values higher than the references. For details see Methods.
Con. = mean controls values (n = 30); n.d. not determined; Ref. = mean DFG reference values available from the Senate Commission of the German Research Council [DFG, 2012]. NS = non smoker, S = smoker.
Figure 1Theoretical HEV and MEV hemoglobin adduct levels at the time of the individual exposure to ethylene oxide and methyl bromide, respectively. All values were adjusted to smoking status using MEV/CEV and HEV/CEV coefficients. The data was modeled as described in the results part.
Additional effect biomonitoring performed after the third incident
| Patient | 8-OHdG (urine) [μg/g Crea.] | mtDNA79 (serum) [arbitrary] | Creatinine (urine) [g/L] |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pat.1 |
|
| 2.42 |
| Pat.2 | 4.6 |
| 0.40 |
| Pat.3 |
|
| 1.34 |
| Pat.4 |
|
| 1.35 |
| Pat.5 |
|
| 1.43 |
| Pat.6 |
|
| 0.41 |
| Con. | 6.7 | 0.08 | |
| Ref. | n.d. | n.d. | 0.5-3.0 |
Human biomonitoring (BM2) measurements were performed in samples collected five days after the third accident. The data show measurements of 8-OHdG as well as the circulating mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA79). The bold data, indicate for values higher than the references.
The controls (con.) represent median values from 30 non-exposed individuals measured in the same analytical step as the patient samples.
n.d. not determined; Ref. = DFG = reference values available from the Senate Commission of the German Research Council [DFG, 2012].