Abstract

This study evaluates personal exposure to respirable inorganic and organic fibers during normal human lifetimes and assesses the order of magnitude of the contribution of inorganic fibers other than asbestos to total fiber exposure from man-made and natural sources. Four groups (suburban schoolchildren, rural retired persons, office workers, and taxi drivers), with five persons per group, were monitored for 24 h four times during one year. Personal sampling pumps collected airborne dust on gold-precoated Nuclepore filters. The fibers were analyzed for fiber sizes specified by the World Health Organization. The geometric mean concentrations ranged from 9000 fibers.m-3 (office workers) to 20000 fibers.m-3 (schoolchildren) for organic fibers, and from 600 fibers.m-3 (taxi drivers) to 4000 fibers.m-3 (schoolchildren) for gypsum fibers. For other inorganic fibers the concentrations were around 5000 fibers.m-3. The contribution of fibers with an elemental composition similar to that of man-made vitreous fibers (MMVF) was less than about one-quarter of the content of other inorganic fibers. The fiber size distributions were uniform across the groups, and the organic fibers were the longest and thinnest nonasbestos fibers. Lifetime exposure to fibers can be ranked as organic fibers > other inorganic fibers > fibers with an elemental composition similar to MMVF > MMVF. Information on the biological effects of fibers is difficult to interpret for use in assessing the health risk from exposure to low levels of ubiquitous fibers, and there is a lack of knowledge on the effects of organic fibers.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThis study evaluates personal exposure to respirable inorganic and organic fibers during nonnal human lifetimes and assessesthe order of magnitude of the contribution of inorganic fibers other than asbestos to total fiber exposurefrom man-madeand natural sources

  • No difference in the organic fiber concentration was found; fiber abrasion from clothing was probably not a major source of contamination

  • The concentration of asbestosfibers was frequently below the detection limit. This situation has been found by others . but it is welllrnown that, in urban air, most of the fibers are short and thin and the concentrations are method dependent.Tbe mean and confidence intervals bad to be calculated from one meta-sample from eachof the person groups

Read more

Summary

Objectives

This study evaluates personal exposure to respirable inorganic and organic fibers during nonnal human lifetimes and assessesthe order of magnitude of the contribution of inorganic fibers other than asbestos to total fiber exposurefrom man-madeand natural sources. Methods Four groups (suburban schoolchildren, rural retired persons,office workers, and taxi drivers), with five personsper group, were monitored tor 24 h tour times during ODeyear. Personalsampling pumps collected airborne dust on gold-precoated Nuclepore ftIters. The fibers were analyzed for fiber sizes specified by the World Health Organization

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call