| Literature DB >> 29324056 |
Lin Zhao1, Yifang Zhu2, Zhangjian Chen1, Huadong Xu1, Jingwen Zhou3, Shichuan Tang4, Zhizhen Xu4, Fanling Kong5, Xinwei Li3, Yifei Zhang6, Xianzuo Li6, Ji Zhang3, Guang Jia1.
Abstract
Although some toxicological studies have reported that exposure to titanium dioxide nanoparticles (nano-TiO2) may elicit adverse cardiopulmonary effects, related data collected from human are currently limited. The purpose of this study is to explore cardiopulmonary effects among workers who were exposed to nano-TiO2 and to identify biomarkers associated with exposure. A cross-sectional study was conducted in a nano-TiO2 manufacturing plant in eastern China. Exposure assessment and characterization of TiO2 particles were performed in a packaging workshop. Physical examination and possible biomarkers for cardiopulmonary effects were examined among 83 exposed workers and 85 controls. In packaging workshop, the total mass concentration of particles was 3.17 mg/m3. The mass concentration of nanoparticles was 1.22 mg/m3 accounting for 39% of the total mass. Lung damage markers (SP-D and pulmonary function), cardiovascular disease markers (VCAM-1, ICAM-1, LDL, and TC), oxidative stress markers (SOD and MDA), and inflammation markers (IL-8, IL-6, IL-1β, TNF-α, and IL-10) were associated with occupational exposure to nano-TiO2. Among those markers, SP-D showed a time (dose)-response pattern within exposed workers. The data strongly suggest that nano-TiO2 could contribute, at least in part, to the cardiopulmonary effects observed in workers. The studied markers and pulmonary function tests may be useful in health surveillance for workers exposed to nanomaterials.Entities:
Keywords: Nanoparticles; cardiovascular diseases; nanotoxicology; occupational health; pulmonary function
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29324056 DOI: 10.1080/17435390.2018.1425502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotoxicology ISSN: 1743-5390 Impact factor: 5.913