| Literature DB >> 30816970 |
Raquel Sabino1,2, Cristina Veríssimo1, Carla Viegas3,4, Susana Viegas3,4, João Brandão5, Magna Alves-Correia6, Luís-Miguel Borrego6,7, Karl V Clemons8,9, David A Stevens8,9, Malcolm Richardson10,11.
Abstract
Aspergillus spp. have a high nutritional versatility and good growth on a large variety of construction materials. They also colonize soil or food, but decaying vegetation is their primary ecological niche. Therefore, exposure to fungi may occur at home, during hospitalization, during specific leisure activities, or at the workplace. The development of Aspergillus infections depends on the interplay between host susceptibility and the organism. Environments with high counts of fungal elements (conidia, hyphal fragments and others), high levels of bioarerosols, and elevated concentrations of mycotoxins or other volatile organic compounds should be considered as potential hazards, since they may present a risk to the exposed person. Rural tasks as well as work related to wood and food industries, poultries, swineries, waste handling plants, and other occupational environments involving contaminated organic material are among the ones posing higher respiratory risks to the workers. This paper presents a review of several studies related to occupational and indoor exposure to Aspergillus, potential health effects related to that exposure, and associated exposure assessment procedures.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Aspergilluszzm321990 ; indoor exposure, fungal occupational exposure, Aspergillus-associated diseases, resistance, exposure assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30816970 DOI: 10.1093/mmy/myy090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Mycol ISSN: 1369-3786 Impact factor: 4.076