Abstract

To investigate health effects of long-term exposure to formaldehyde a cross-sectional field study was performed. Seventy formaldehyde-exposed workers were compared with a control group. A higher frequency of symptoms from upper and lower airways, headache, and dermal discomfort was found in the formaldehyde-exposed group. Further, formaldehyde-exposed workers showed disturbances of nasal physiologic conditions, such as slow nasal clearance, impairment of the sense of smell, more pronounced nasal mucosal swelling, and by spirometry lower forced vital capacity than expected was found. Nasal biopsies from the concha media showed more frequent histologic changes such as loss of cilia and metaplasia in the formaldehyde-exposed group. Histologic lesions did not correlate to current or cumulative exposure doses to formaldehyde. In an experimental study of Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to formaldehyde (12.7 mg/m3, 6 hours/day, 5 days/week for 24 months), one rat developed a squamous cell carcinoma in the nose and another nasal dysplasia and in seven other rats pronounced nasal metaplasia was seen in the nasal mucosa. In a control group of rats no significant histologic lesions were found.

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