Abstract

We performed a cross-sectional study to detect occupational asthma (OA) in 63 subjects occupationally exposed to herbal and fruit tea dust and in 63 corresponding controls. The evaluation included a questionnaire, skin prick tests to workplace and common inhalant allergens, spirometry, and histamine challenge test. The evaluation of the work-relatedness of asthma in the exposed workers was based on serial peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) measurements and bronchoprovocation tests. We found a higher prevalence of respiratory symptoms in the exposed workers, whereas spirometric parameters were significantly lower. The prevalence of sensitisation to allergens and of bronchial hyperresponsivenss (BHR) did not differ significantly between the groups. The prevalence of asthma was also similar in both groups (8.0 % vs. 6.4 %; P=0.540). Work-relatedness of symptoms was reported by all asthmatic tea workers and by no control with asthma. Significant work-related changes in PEFR diurnal variations and in non-specific BHR, suggesting allergic OA, were found in one tea worker with asthma (1.6 %). No specific workplace agent causing OA in the affected subject was identified. None of the tea workers with asthma met the criteria for medical case definition of the reactive airway dysfunction syndrome (RADS). Our data confirm workplace exposure to herbal and fruit tea dust as a risk factor for OA.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWe performed a cross-sectional study to detect occupational asthma (OA) in 63 subjects occupationally exposed to herbal and fruit tea dust and in 63 corresponding controls

  • A significantly higher prevalence of respiratory symptoms in tea workers was related to the shortness of breath (Table 2)

  • Work-related worsening of symptoms was reported by 78.3 % (18/23) of tea workers with respiratory symptoms

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Summary

Introduction

We performed a cross-sectional study to detect occupational asthma (OA) in 63 subjects occupationally exposed to herbal and fruit tea dust and in 63 corresponding controls. Work-relatedness of symptoms was reported by all asthmatic tea workers and by no control with asthma. Our data confirm workplace exposure to herbal and fruit tea dust as a risk factor for OA. Studies of substance-specific risk help to identify or implicate particular substances as causative agents, but they generally focus on a limited number of agents, and can not determine the full extent of asthma from workplace exposure. This article presents our findings of OA in a group of subjects occupationally exposed to herbal and fruit tea dust, and is a continuation of our study on exercise-induced bronchoconstriction and respiratory symptoms in the same subjects [11]

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