| Literature DB >> 36157059 |
Denise Ransolin Soranso1, Luciano José Minette2, Marcio Marçal3, João Carlos Bouzas Marins4, Stanley Schettino5, Roldão Carlos A Lima6, Michel Oliveira7.
Abstract
Background: Workers in the wood processing industry perform activities that demand great physical and ergonomic demands, which favors the emergence of inflammatory processes and in turn the occurrence of heat regions in the body, thus making it possible to assess the inflammatory level by means of temperature gradients. This study aimed to evaluate the use of thermography as an ergonomic analysis tool to identify regions with musculoskeletal overload in workers in a wood processing industry.Entities:
Keywords: Occupational diseases; Thermal patterns; Wood splitting
Year: 2022 PMID: 36157059 PMCID: PMC9504449 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 3.061
Description of operations performed by workers in the wood processing industry.
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| Primary split | This refers to the process of reducing whole logs through longitudinal cuts into smaller parts which can be boards, boards or rectangular or square pieces. The wood logs are moved by the log carriage to the main sawing machine, called a single vertical band saw. This operation normally involves three workers, one being responsible for operating the band saw and the other two for fixing the log in the log carrier, removing and disposing of the boards generated in the processing on a ramp that supplies the secondary split. |
| Secondary split | This corresponds to the activity performed after the primary split, with the purpose of reducing the size or defining the final dimensioning of the wooden pieces. |
| Secondary stripping | This is performed using circular saws, and aims to regularize the final length of the wooden pieces according to the standard for sale. This task is normally carried out by two workers, one being responsible for operating the circular saw and the other for removing the pieces of wood and placing them close to the site, where manual stacking/packing is later carried out by other workers. |
| Manual stacking | This consists of forming piles of sawn wood, for which the pieces of each pile have the same dimensions. Two workers manually load the pieces, holding each one at one end, and deposit them in the place where the piles are being formed. |
Average values of anthropometric variables of workers in the wood processing industry evaluated.
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| Average | 39 (21–58) | 65.4 (60–76) | 1.73 (1.67–1.84) | 21.8 (20.7–24.8) |
Notes.
Body mass index obtained by the formula: BMI = Weight/Height2.
Values in parentheses refer to the minimum and maximum values of each variable.
Figure 1Body regions of interest (BRI), lumbar and scapular, selected in the posterior position of each evaluated worker.
Average and maximum skin temperature values of the Body Regions of Interest (BRI) of workers (n = 09) evaluated on day I and day II.
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| Scapular | Average | 32,70 | 32,40 |
| Standard deviation | ±1,08 | ±0,90 | |
| Maximum | 34,2 | 33,9 | |
| Lumbar | Average | 32,20 | 32,00 |
| Standard deviation | ±0,70 | ±0,90 | |
| Maximum | 34,3 | 34,3 | |
Notes.
The averages showed no significant statistical difference ( p < 0.001).
Figure 2Comparison of thermal image of workers evaluated on day I (Monday, after a longer period of rest <48 h) and day II (rest of approximately 12 h associated with the accumulation of days worked).