Abstract

Dissecting a human cadaver is an irreplaceable practice in general training of medical students. Cadavers in anatomy laboratories are usually preserved in formalin, an embalming fluid whose basic component is formaldehyde (FA). The aim of this study is to assess the cancer risk of employees and students that are exposed to FA based on the results of three monitoring campaigns, as well as to suggest permanent solutions to the problem of FA exposure based on the results obtained. Three sampling campaigns of formaldehyde concentration in indoor environments were conducted at five different locations at the Anatomy Department of the Faculty of Medicine with the purpose of assessing permanent employees’ and medical faculty first year students’ exposure to FA. Indoor air was continuously sampled during 8 h of laboratory work and analyzed in accordance with the NIOSH Method 3500. Exceeding of the 8 h time-weighted average (8 h TWA) values recommended by Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) of 0.75 ppm was recorded in 37% of the samples during the three-month monitoring campaign. Cancer risk assessment levels for permanent employees were in the range from 6.43 × 10−3 to 8.77 × 10−4, while the cancer risk assessment levels for students ranged from 8.94 × 10−7 to 1.83 × 10−6. The results of the research show that cancer risk assessment for employees is several thousand times higher than the limit recommended by the EPA (10−6) and point to the importance of reducing exposure to formaldehyde through the reconstruction of the existing ventilation system, continual monitoring, the use of formaldehyde-free products, and plastination of anatomical specimens.

Highlights

  • The dissection of human cadavers is an irreplaceable practice in general training of medical students and doctors in specialist training, in conducting research on fundamental anatomical and pathological phenomena, and in the improvement of diagnostic and therapeutic methods

  • Cadavers in anatomy laboratories are usually preserved in formalin [1], an embalming fluid that contains formaldehyde (FA) as a principal component [2]

  • The Department of Anatomy is located on the ground floor of the Medical Faculty, Novi Sad, Serbia

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Summary

Introduction

The dissection of human cadavers is an irreplaceable practice in general training of medical students and doctors in specialist training, in conducting research on fundamental anatomical and pathological phenomena, and in the improvement of diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Cadavers in anatomy laboratories are usually preserved in formalin [1], an embalming fluid that contains formaldehyde (FA) as a principal component [2]. FA polymerizes at high concentrations and after long storage periods, it is often used commercially as a 37–40 % solution of FA (formalin) [3]. Formalin allows long-term tissue stability and it preserves tissue architecture [4]. The term “formalin” describes aqueous solutions that usually contain both FA and an alcohol stabilizer [5,6]. FA vapors are emitted from the cadavers, resulting in the exposure

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