Abstract

The health effects of exposure to vanadium in fuel-oil ash are not well described at levels ranging from 10 to 500 μ g/m3. As part of a larger occupational epidemiologic study that assessed these effects during the overhaul of a large oil-fired boiler, this study was designed to quantify boilermakers' exposures to fuel-oil ash particles, metals, and welding gases, and to identify determinants of these exposures. Personal exposure measurements were conducted on 18 boilermakers and 11 utility workers (referents) before and during a 3-week overhaul. Ash particles < 10 μm in diameter (PM 10 , mg/m3) were sampled over full work shifts using a one-stage personal size selective sampler containing a polytetrafluoroethylene filter. Filters were digested using the Parr bomb method and analyzed for the metals vanadium (V), nickel (Ni), iron (Fe), chromium (Cr), cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), manganese (Mn), and arsenic (As) by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) was measured with an Ogawa passive badge-type sampler and ozone (O3) with a personal active pump sampler. Time-weighted average (TWA) exposures were significantly higher (p < 0.05) for boilermakers than for utility workers for PM10 (geometric mean: 0.47 vs. 0.13 mg/m3), V (8.9 vs. 1.4 μ g/m3), Ni (7.4 vs. 1.8 μ g/m3) and Fe (56.2 vs. 11.2 μ g/m3). Exposures were affected by overhaul time periods, tasks, and work locations. No significant increases were found for O3 or NO2 for boilermakers or utility workers regardless of overhaul period or task group. Fuel-oil ash was a major contributor to boilermakers' exposure to PM10 and metals. Vanadium concentrations sometimes exceeded the 2003 American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIHreg;) threshold limit value.

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