Trimethylbenzenes (TMB)

Project ID

1676

Category

IRIS

Added on

Aug. 3, 2011, 12:13 a.m.

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Journal Article

Abstract  The relationship between exposure to 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene (1,2,4-TMB) and urinary concentration of 3,4-dimethylhippuric acid (3,4-DMHA), one of its metabolites, was studied in workers involved in transfer printing. Airborne TMBs were sampled by an organic vapor monitoring badge and analyzed by capillary gas chromatography. Urinary 3,4-DMHA and creatinine were analyzed under the same conditions of high-performance liquid chromatography. The exposure concentration of 1,2,4-TMB among workers was around 25 ppm, the threshold limit value (TLV). The urinary concentration of 3,4-DMHA was low at the start of each shift and high at the end. Exposure to the TLV (25 ppm) of 1,2,4-TMB results in a urinary 3,4-DMHA concentration of 410 mg/g creatinine (r = 0.897, P < 0.001). Urinary 3,4-DMHA concentration could be used as a biological monitoring index for 1,2,4-TMB exposure.

Journal Article

Abstract  Migrant and seasonal farmworkers have a high potential for pesticide exposures, yet are rarely included in epidemiologic studies. This study examined the feasibility of assessing prenatal exposures to pesticides and other compounds in pregnant Hispanic farmworkers.

Nine women completed a survey about work experiences during pregnancy. Maternal urine, cord blood, and placenta samples were obtained at delivery for analysis of 51 analytes, including 6 phenoxy acid or triazine herbicides, 21 organochlorine insecticides, 10 PCBs, and 14 volatile organic compounds.

Seven of 51 analytes were found in the biological samples. DDE, DDT, dichlorbenzene, toluene, trimethylbenzene, and endosulfan sulfate were detected in cord blood samples, and 2,4-D in urine from one or more women.

We documented the feasibility of following farmworkers to assess in utero exposure to pesticides and other contaminants, and demonstrated exposure to these compounds. Difficulties in measuring pesticides with short half lives were noted.

Journal Article

Abstract  This paper presents data from both a human volunteer study looking at exposure to 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene (TMB) and an occupational hygiene study of a printing firm using screen wash containing technical grade TMB. The biomarkers measured were TMB in blood and breath, and urinary dimethylbenzoic acids (DMBAs). The volunteer (N = 4) study showed that TMB was rapidly absorbed into the bloodstream reaching a mean level of 0.85 micromol l(-1) during a 4 h exposure to 25 p.p.m. TMB. There was little decline 1 h post-exposure possibly indicating storage of TMB in adipose tissue. Breath TMB levels peaked within an hour of exposure commencing and averaged 137 nmol l(-1) during exposure. Elimination of TMB in breath was biphasic with an initial half-life of 60 min. Peak excretion of urinary DMBA occurred 4-8 h after the end of exposure and averaged 40 mmol mol(-1) creatinine. Elimination of DMBA in urine was biphasic with half-lives of 13 and 60 h indicating that accumulation of body burden throughout the working week is likely if exposure is repeated. The occupational hygiene study demonstrated an excellent correlation between personal air TMB levels and post-shift urinary DMBA levels (r = 0.997) collected on the third working day. The regression equation from this study indicates that 8 h exposure to 25 p.p.m. TMB would result in a urinary DMBA level of 206 mmol mol(-1) creatinine. All workers showed pre-shift levels of DMBA from exposure to TMB on previous days. Both urinary DMBA and breath TMB levels can be used as biomarkers of TMB exposure. Urine samples should be taken post-shift towards the end of the working week as significant body burden accumulation throughout the working week can be expected. Breath sampling is more suited to task or single-shift monitoring.

Journal Article

Abstract  Subjective symptoms and exposure to organic compounds were recorded in road repair and construction workers. Abnormal fatigue, reduced appetite, laryngeal/pharyngeal irritation, and eye irritation were recorded more often in such workers handling asphalt than in a corresponding reference group without asphalt exposure. Mean daily exposure to volatile compounds was only occasionally above 1 ppm. Mean exposure to asphalt fume was 0.358 mg/m3. There was no correlation between symptoms and total amount of volatile compounds, but a significant positive correlation was demonstrated between symptoms and some substances. The highest correlation was found for 1, 2, 4 trimethyl benzene. Symptoms increased with increasing asphalt temperature and with increasing concentrations of asphalt fumes. Amine addition did not increase the sum of symptoms, but soft asphalt seems to result in fewer symptoms than the harder types. Symptoms were not related to external factors like weather, traffic density, or specific working operations. As preventive measures, asphalt temperature should be kept below 150 degrees C, fume concentrations below 0.40 mg/m3, and if possible, the use of harder asphalt types which also require high temperatures should be avoided.

DOI
Journal Article

Abstract  In a painter's workshop, where 27 painters and 10 auxiliaries are employed, industrial hygiene and medical tests were performed in view to solve the question as to a relationship existing between the hydrocarbon solvents of high boiling point used in this workshop and the observed health damages. The results of these tests have shown that the painters have been working for several years mainly with a solvent composed of trimethylbenzene. The concentration of this solvent in the air varied between 10 and 60 ppm. Besides a survey of the general work conditions and of the sickness absenteism, the workers were submitted to a thorough medical examination. The latter revealed for the 27 painters a remarkably high percentage of subjective nervous complaints, bronchitis with asthma, anaemic hyperchromic blood picture, and coagulation troubles. These pathological states had to be put on account of the exposure to trimethylbenzene.

Journal Article

Abstract  Some clinical and laboratory studies indicate that industrial solvents such as toluene, styrene, xylene, trichloroethylene and carbon disulfide or their mixtures may affect the inner ear, although the mechanism of this process is still not well understood. The aim of this investigation was to assess the incidence of hearing and vestibular disorders (using modem audiological and vestibular tests) in 61 workers exposed to a mixture of organic solvents at the production of paints and varnishes; the control group included 40 age-matched non-exposed subjects. Environmental and biological monitoring revealed that the most significant exposure can be attributed to the following mixture constituents: ethylbenzene, xylene and trimethylbenzene isomers such as pseudocumene, mesitylene and hemimellitene. Electronystagmographic examinations showed the symptoms of vestibular dysfunction, as well as the decreased duration, amplitude and slow phase angular velocity of induced nystagmus in 47.5% of the subjects exposed versus 5% of controls. This was accompanied by sensorineural high frequency hearing loss, identified by means of pure tone audiometry in 42% of those exposed versus 5% controls, and reduced amplitudes of transiently evoked and distortion-product otoacoustic emissions. The findings closely correspond with the rate of the total exposure to the solvent mixture. A possible mechanism responsible for ototoxicity of solvents is discussed

Journal Article

Abstract  OBJECTIVES: To study mortality and prevalence of neuropsychological symptoms among a cohort of painters known to have been heavily exposed to organic solvents. METHODS: A mortality study of 1292 male painters who had worked in a dockyard in Scotland for > or = 1 year between 1950 and 1992 comprised a nested cross sectional study of 953 surviving painters from the cohort and 953 male non-painters randomly selected from the local population and a case-control study of those with high symptom scores. Mortality, symptoms, and risks associated with painting, adjusting for age, education, smoking, alcohol, and personality were measured. RESULTS: The proportional mortality ratio for all cancers was not increased significantly (110 (95% confidence interval (95% CI) 84 to 143), except for a possible excess of deaths from ischaemic heart disease (132, 105 to 164). Standardised mortality ratios were not significantly increased. Among the 260 surviving painters and 539 community controls who responded to the questionnaire there was a significant excess of symptoms among painters; adjusted relative risk (RR) increased significantly with increasing symptom score. These RRs suggested an exposure-response relation; for a high score (12-22) for all symptoms RR was 2.27 (1.20 to 4.30) for 1-4 years of exposure, 2.42 (1.18 to 4.95) for 5-9 years, 2.89 (1.42 to 5.88) for 10-14 years, and 3.41 (1.82 to 6.36) for 15-41 years, compared with controls. In multivariate analyses, painting exposure, and aging were associated with high symptom scores and there was again an increased risk relative to time worked as a painter. CONCLUSION: This study supports the hypothesis that heavy and prolonged exposure to paint solvents leads to neuropsychological ill health.

Journal Article

Abstract  The urinary excretion of 3,4-dimethylhippuric acid (34DMHA), a 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene (124TMB) metabolite, was investigated in workers exposed to 124TMB vapor. The time-weighted average of exposure to 124TMB was determined with a diffusive sampler. For biological monitoring of exposure, urine samples were collected from individual workers and analyzed for metabolites by high-pressure liquid chromatography. The concentration of urinary 34DMHA had a positive correlation with the level of exposure to 124TMB (r = 0.72). The data suggest that 34DMHA is one of the useful indicators for biological monitoring of 124TMB exposure.

Journal Article

Abstract  This study was conducted to evaluate neurobehavioral changes arising from occupational exposure to organic solvents among shipyard painters and to establish whether a dose-effect relation existed where there was any observed impairment of neurobehavioral performance by running the test of Simple Reaction Time (SRT), Symbol Digit Substitution (SD), and Finger Tapping Speed (FT) with a computer-assisted neurobehavioral test battery. The study group consisted of 180 shipyard painters and 60 reference workers. The workers answered a self-administered questionnaire on occupational, medical history, and demographic characteristics including age, work duration, education level, and quantity and frequency of alcohol and smoking, and performed three psychometric tests on the Korean Computerized Neurobehavioral tests. To estimate cumulative exposure level, samples of ambient air on 61 painters were analyzed using a gas chromatograph. Shipyard painters and the reference group showed significant differences in the results of test of SD, FT of dominant hand, and FT of non-dominant hand. The test results of SD of shipyard painters also showed significant difference by duration of work. This suggests that occupational exposure of organic solvent could induce neurobehavioral changes in the shipyard painters. Therefore an objective neurobehavioral tests recommended on evaluating neurobehavioral performance of long-term solvent-exposed shipyard workers.

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