Abstract

BackgroundCommercial use of carbon nanotubes and nanofibers (CNT/F) in composites and electronics is increasing; however, little is known about health effects among workers. We conducted a cross-sectional study among 108 workers at 12 U.S. CNT/F facilities. We evaluated chest symptoms or respiratory allergies since starting work with CNT/F, lung function, resting blood pressure (BP), resting heart rate (RHR), and complete blood count (CBC) components.MethodsWe conducted multi-day, full-shift sampling to measure background-corrected elemental carbon (EC) and CNT/F structure count concentrations, and collected induced sputum to measure CNT/F in the respiratory tract. We measured (nonspecific) fine and ultrafine particulate matter mass and count concentrations. Concurrently, we conducted physical examinations, BP measurement, and spirometry, and collected whole blood. We evaluated associations between exposures and health measures, adjusting for confounders related to lifestyle and other occupational exposures.ResultsCNT/F air concentrations were generally low, while 18% of participants had evidence of CNT/F in sputum. Respiratory allergy development was positively associated with inhalable EC (p=0.040) and number of years worked with CNT/F (p=0.008). No exposures were associated with spirometry-based metrics or pulmonary symptoms, nor were CNT/F-specific metrics related to BP or most CBC components. Systolic BP was positively associated with fine particulate matter (p-values: 0.015-0.054). RHR was positively associated with EC, at both the respirable (p=0.0074) and inhalable (p=0.0026) size fractions. Hematocrit was positively associated with the log of CNT/F structure counts (p=0.043).ConclusionsMost health measures were not associated with CNT/F. The positive associations between CNT/F exposure and respiratory allergies, RHR, and hematocrit counts may not be causal and require examination in other studies.

Highlights

  • Commercial use of carbon nanotubes and nanofibers (CNT/F) in composites and electronics is increasing; little is known about health effects among workers

  • We identified a few health measures significantly associated with some metrics of CNT/F exposure: 14% of workers developed respiratory allergy after starting work with CNT/F, and the odds of reporting respiratory allergies increased with length of time spent working with CNT/F

  • We found that most pulmonary, cardiovascular and hematologic measures were unrelated to metrics of CNT/F exposure in U.S workplaces

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Summary

Introduction

Commercial use of carbon nanotubes and nanofibers (CNT/F) in composites and electronics is increasing; little is known about health effects among workers. Carbon nanotubes and nanofibers (CNT/F) are small, high-aspect-ratio (>5 μm long,

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