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RESEARCHER: Vincent Castranova
AFFILIATION: Health Effects Laboratory Division
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-6032
PURPOSE: Evaluate the cytotoxicity of abrasive
substitutes for silica, determine the importance of fiber length in the
cytotoxicity of fibers, and elucidate mechanisms for initiation and progression
of fibrosis.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Silica and asbestos are
known to cause lung damage and fibrosis. Therefore, there is a great deal
of interest in limiting the use of silica as an abrasive material in sandblasting
and to create fibers that would replace asbestos as a construction material.
However, toxicological information on silica and asbestos substitutes is
incomplete or absent, and data are lacking concerning the possible adverse
effects of inhalation of abrasive substitutes for silica. Researchers on
this project will develop a database on in vitro and in vivo pulmonary toxicity
of several abrasive substitutes and characterize the role of physical and
chemical properties of fibers in the development of lung disease.
- The toxicity of silica substitutes will be evaluated using assays
of lung cell function and viability after both in vitro and in vivo
exposure to these materials. To date, the in vivo effects of silica
and 10 abrasive substitutes (garnet, iron oxide, starolite, coal slag,
treated sand, olivine, copper slag, nickel slag, crushed glass. and
steel grit) have been investigated.
- A dielectrophoresis apparatus has been developed that separates fibers
according to length. Such a system allows the evaluation of the role
of physical dimensions versus chemistry in the development of pulmonary
disease and should assist in predicting the potential fibrogenicity
of created asbestos substitutes. To date, a strong relationship between
fiber length and in vitro toxicity has been shown with fiberglass. Additional
experiments evaluated the role of fiber length on the production of
inflammatory and fibrogenic cytokines and on transcription events.
- Mechanistic studies (oxidant generation, activation of transcription
factors, induction of mRNA for cytokine production) will be used to
explain the initiation and progression of pulmonary inflammation, damage,
and fibrosis. Such information could be used to evaluate the potential
occupational health hazard posed by substitute materials and result
in the development of early diagnostic tests for pulmonary disease.
KEYWORDS: Asbestos, silicosis, silica substitutes,
sandblasting
RECENT CITATIONS:
Blake, T., V. Castranova, D. Schwegler-Berry, P. Baron, G.J. Deye, C. Li,
and W. Jones. 1998. Effect of fiber length on glass microfiber cytotoxicity.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, v. 54, Part A, pp.
243-259.
Hubbs, A.F., N.S. Minhas, W. Jones, M. Greskevitch, L.A. Battelli, D.W.
Porter, W.T. Goldsmith, D. Frazer, D.P. Landsittel, J.Y.C. Ma, M. Barger,
K. Hill, D. Schwegler-Berry, V.A. Robinson, and V. Castranova. 2001. Comparative
pulmonary toxicity of 6 abrasive blasting agents. Toxicological Science,
v. 61, pp. 135- 143.
Porter, D.W., D. Ramsey, A.F. Hubbs L. Battelli, J. Ma, M.A. Barger, D.
Landsettel, V.A. Robinson, J. Mc-Laurin, A. Khan, W. Jones, A. Teass, and
V. Castranova. 2001. Time course of pulmonary response of rats to inhalation
of crystalline silica: Histological results and biochemical indices of damage,
lipidosis and fibrosis. Journal of Environmental Pathology, Toxicology
and Oncology, v. 20, Supplement 2, pp. 1-14.
RESEARCHER: Val Vallyathan
AFFILIATION: Health Effects Laboratory
Division National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-5770
PURPOSE: Investigate the effects of different
metal ions deposited on crystalline silica during sandblasting of metal
plates and the independent and synergistic interaction of trace metals associated
with exposures to mixed dusts.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: It is estimated that there
are approximately 536,000 cancer deaths in the United States each year and
that 23% of these deaths are related to workplace exposures either to a
single toxic agent or in synergy with mixtures of agents. Workers are commonly
exposed to dust mixtures containing minerals or crystalline silica containing
trace amounts of metals during the use of cutting tools, drills, pulverizers,
etc. While acute and chronic inhalation of mixed dusts has been shown to
affect the pulmonary system adversely and even lead to death, epidemiological
studies have also shown that cancer occurrences vary considerably within
populations exposed to different sources of crystalline silica.
The relationship between exposures to crystalline silica and lung cancer
has been debated since laboratory tests showed that inhaled silica can cause
lung cancer in rats at relatively low doses (1 mg/m 3 ). In 1997, the International
Agency for Research in Cancer (IARC) published a report concluding that
evidence was sufficient to state that crystalline silica is a carcinogen.
However, the report also noted that carcinogeneity was not observed in all
industries in which workers were exposed to silica, and that some inherent,
unknown characteristics of crystalline silica were involved in its biological
effects, thus confounding clear understanding as to the mechanisms involved.
Laboratory studies will investigate the early biological and molecular events
involved in pulmonary molecular reactions that may lead to carcinogenesis
after exposure to pure crystalline silica containing trace amounts of pure
metals. Studies on biomarkers may provide some positive identification of
groups at high risk when exposed to mixed dusts.
KEYWORDS: Cancer, crystalline silica, pulmonary
disease
RESEARCHER: Millie Schafer
AFFILIATION: Division of Applied Research
and Technology National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513)
841-4362
PURPOSE: Develop a fast, inexpensive, specific,
fungal sampling and analytical method to detect fungi in soil and bird and
bat droppings.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Workers in various construction
trades have become seriously ill and some have died from occupationally
acquired histoplasmosis. Outbreaks of this and other fungal diseases among
construction workers continue to be reported following the demolition of
contaminated buildings. Inhalation of spore-containing dust often contaminated
with bird or bat droppings is the primary cause of these diseases.
NIOSH has received numerous inquiries and has actively engaged in the preparation
of Health Hazard Evaluations pertaining to worker concerns about Histoplasma
capsulatum, Cryptococcus neoformans, Blastomyces dermatitidis, and Coccidioides
immitis associated with bat and bird droppings or contaminated soil
in various occupational settings.
The efficacy of various technologies and methods for preventing these infections
has not been adequately evaluated because no reliable, direct, soil isolation
method exists for detecting these fungal agents. Small quantities of H.
capsulatum are difficult to detect in soil samples. Fast, inexpensive
analytical methods for specific fungi would permit their detection in soil
and bird and bat droppings. The efficacy of various disinfectants could
then be evaluated, as well as environmental control measures such as dust
suppression. A method with sufficient sensitivity to detect small numbers
of fungi is being developed using state-of-the-art molecular bioanalytical
techniques to identify pathogenic fungi from construction and agricultural
workplaces. A DNA analytical method, the polymerase chain reaction (PCR),
has been developed specifically to detect H. capsulatum.
PATENT: Application number U.S.S.N. 60/082,477
KEYWORDS: H. capsulatum, PCR, pathogenic
fungus
RECENT CITATIONS: Reid, T.M., and M.P. Schafer. 1999.
Direct detection of Histoplasma capsulatum in soil suspensions by two-stage
PCR. Molecular and Cellular Probes, v. 13, pp. 269-273.
RESEARCHER: David Wegman
AFFILIATION: University of Massachusetts-Lowell
(978) 934-3265
PURPOSE: Investigate the nature of the association
between exposures to welding fumes and acute respiratory responses through
a study of welding apprentices.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Despite some inconsistencies
in study results, evidence of an association between exposure to welding
fumes and occupational asthma has been growing over the past 15 years. Most
earlier epidemiological studies concerning exposures to welding fumes and
their respiratory effects have been limited by the cross-sectional study
design, the selection of study populations with extensive welding experience,
and limited information on the timing and nature of exposures to welding
fumes.
We propose a study of 200 welding apprentices in which airway reactivity
and acute respiratory responses will be measured early in the apprentices'
careers, that is, within 6 months of their first exposure to welding fumes.
Since welders who experience respiratory problems related to welding are
less likely to stay in the welding field over the long term, a study of
welding apprentices who are just entering the field has the advantage of
including workers who experience respiratory problems early on.
The study design focuses on short-term changes in pulmonary function parameters
with simultaneous real-time assessment of exposures to particulates and
nitrous oxide (NOx). Average levels of exposure to these variables and to
fluoride will be provided during the training session. Recent evidence suggests
that there is an acute respiratory response 15 minutes after the first daily
exposure to welding fumes, so pulmonary function and respiratory symptoms
will be measured before the start of a welding training session, 15 minutes
after the first weld, and at hourly intervals throughout the welding session.
The real-time personal exposure measurements will be used to identify peak
levels. These exposure variables will be examined in relation to respiratory
responses, and airway reactivity will be measured by response to cold-air
challenge testing before and after apprentices have learned to weld. In
addition, determinants of welding fume exposures will be identified by considering
factors such as ventilation, type of welding work, and worker habits.
This study will provide insights into the nature of the association between
welding fume exposures and acute respiratory responses. Recommendations
will be made for the most effective respiratory and exposure variables to
use in epidemiological assessments. Assessment of determinants of exposure
will also be useful for consideration of exposure control options.
KEYWORDS: Welding, asthma
RESEARCHER: Judith Zelikoff
AFFILIATION: New York University Medical
Center (845) 885-5230
PURPOSE: Investigate mechanisms underlying
the elevated lung cancer incidence in welders exposed to fumes containing
both chromium and O3 (ozone).
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Most studies of occupationally relevant chemical
hazards have focused on single contaminants, and so the biological and safety
implications of inhaling mixtures have been ignored in evaluations of the
effects of contaminants on worker health and safety. A major health hazard
from inhalation exposure to chromium- (Cr) containing materials is lung
cancer. However, the contribution from other co-inhalants in modulating
Cr-initiated responses is not clear. Co-contaminants may change the pulmonary
environment, producing conditions that could enhance the formation and survival
of Cr-initiated tumors. During welding, Cr is released with ozone (O3).
It has been demonstrated that inhaling O3 simultaneously with Cr increases
the retention of insoluble Cr particles in the lungs. This situation could
ultimately give rise to conditions within the lungs conducive to the formation
and survival of Cr-initiated neoplasia.
This research will address the hypothesis that the carcinogenic potential
of insoluble Cr in the lungs of welders and other workers inhaling a Cr/O3
mixture is greater than carcinogenic potential in hosts inhaling Cr alone.
The cause is thought to stem from O3-mediated increases in the lung tissue
burdens of Cr and/or augmentation of one or more documented genetic/epigenetic
mechanisms (increased level of DNA damage, chromosomal aberrations, and/or
increases in the activity of cell kinases) associated with Cr-induced conversion
of normal to abnormal cells. More specifically, the effects of O3 on mechanisms
utilized for the intracellular processing of insoluble calcium chromate
[Cr(VI)] particles will be studied.
This project involves exposing rats to atmospheres containing carcinogenic
Cr(VI) alone and in combination with O3. The results of this study should
improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the interaction between
Cr and O3 in the lungs and the role that mixtures of air contaminants may
play in pulmonary disease pathogenesis following exposure.
KEYWORDS:
Airborne contaminants, cancer, mixed exposures
RECENT CITATIONS:
Cohen, M.D., M. Sisco, K. Baker, D. Bowser, L.C. Chen, and R.B. Schlesinger.
(In press.) Impact of co-exposure to ozone on the car-cinogenic potential
of inhaled chromium. I: Effects on retention and on extra- and intracellular
distribution. Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health.

RESEARCHER: Susan Woskie
AFFILIATION: University of Massachusetts-Lowell
(978) 934-3295
CONSORTIUM: CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training
PURPOSE: Reduce respiratory exposures in
concrete work and other stages of construction through the development and
evaluation of appropriate organizational and technological interventions.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Highway construction workers
and operators of heavy construction equipment are exposed to a variety of
inhalation hazards, including dust, diesel exhaust, quartz, welding fumes,
and lead. Personal samples for exposure to dust, diesel exhaust, quartz,
and welding fumes were collected from these workers. The respirable, thoracic,
and inhalable fractions of dust and quartz exposures were estimated from
260 personal samples. Respirable quartz exposures exceeded the NIOSH Recommended
Exposure Limit (REL) in 7% to 31% of the cases in the trades sampled. Over
50% of the samples from workers finishing concrete and installing drop ceilings
and wall tiles exceeded the NIOSH REL for quartz. Thoracic exposures to
quartz and dust exceeded respirable exposures by factors of 4.5 and 2.8,
respectively. Inhalable exposures to quartz and dust exceeded respirable
exposures by factors of 25.6 and 9.3, respectively. These findings are important
because quartz was identified as a carcinogen by the National Toxicology
Program and the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
Fourteen percent of the 261 personal samples for elemental carbon collected
as a marker for diesel exhaust exceeded the American Conference of Govern-mental
Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) Threshold Limit Value (TLV) for diesel exhaust.
Seventeen of the twenty-two (77%) samples taken during a partially enclosed
welding operation reached or exceeded the ACGIH TLV of 5 mg/m 3 for welding
fumes.
Given the potential for high exposures to inhalation hazards in construction,
efforts to develop and implement exposure controls are needed. Exposure
monitoring using videos and quantification of crystalline silica in the
respirable, thoracic, and inhalable particle-size fractions will be used
to evaluate the efficacy of several engineering control interventions, including
the use of local exhaust ventilation and wetting, during the use of power
tools on concrete. Worker and management barriers to organizational interventions
and engineering controls to reduce exposures will be evaluated.
The New England Laborers Training Center is collaborating on this project.
KEYWORDS: Silica, quartz, highway construction,
respiratory hazards, silicosis, interventions
RECENT CITATIONS:
Bello, D., M.A. Virji, A. Kalil, and S.R. Woskie. (In press.) Quanti-fication
of respirable, thoracic and inhalable quartz by FT-IR in impactor samples
from construction sites. American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal.
Kalil, A. 2002. Use of a work sampling method (TVEA) to characterize particulate
exposure determinants in heavy and highway construction. Doctoral dissertation,
University of Massachusetts-Lowell.
Virji, M.A., D. Bello, S.R. Woskie, M.X. Liu, and A. Kalil. 2002. Analysis
of quartz by FT-IR in air samples of construction dust. Applied Occupational
and Environmental Hygiene, v. 17, no. 3, pp. 165-175.
Woskie, S.R., A.J. Kalil, D. Bello, and M.A. Virji. (In press.) Ex-posures
to quartz, diesel, dust and welding fumes in heavy and highway construction.
American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal.
RESEARCHER: Carol Merry Stephenson
AFFILIATION: Education and Information
Division National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 533-8581
PURPOSE: Revise the NIOSH Guide to Industrial
Respiratory Protection to incorporate important advances in respirator technology,
updated OSHA standards, current respirator research, NIOSH recommendations,
and information on emerging nuclear, biologic, and chemical threats where
the use of respirators may be required.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: In partnership with other federal
agencies, NIOSH has a long history of direct involvement in preventing respiratory
injury and illness by certifying respirators and disseminating information
to workers and health and safety professionals about proper respirator use.
Respirators are critical personal protective equipment for workers in many
industries—construction, agriculture, mining, firefighting, and health care.
For example, it has been estimated that 20% of U.S. farmers suffer from
some form of respiratory aliment. Among construction workers, silicosis
is a major concern; among miners, black lung and related respiratory illnesses
have not been eliminated. Recently, the rise in drug-resistant tuberculosis
has resulted in the need for respirator training and use among many health
care workers. Finally, there is new nationwide emphasis on respirator training
for police, firefighters, and emergency medical teams in response to the
threat of terrorism.
In this project, the NIOSH Guide to Industrial Respiratory Protection, first
published in 1987, will be updated. Following a format similar to that in
the 1987 publication, the revised edition will incorporate new NIOSH recommendations
and policies, describe current advances in respiratory protection, update
the OSHA Respiratory Protection Standard, examine trends in respirator research,
and address timely issues related to nuclear, biologic, and chemical threats
where the use of respiratory protection may be necessary.
A team of respirator experts was convened to outline the document, establish
a production timeline, and write the document. When complete, the document
will be widely disseminated, both in print and on the NIOSH website, and
will be a valuable reference for health and safety professionals working
to prevent respiratory illnesses in construction, agriculture, mining, firefighting,
health care, and other work sectors requiring protection from respirable
hazards.
KEYWORDS: Recommendations, respirators
RESEARCHER: Carol Merry Stephenson
AFFILIATION: Education and Information
Division National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 533-8581
PURPOSE: Develop a series of informational
and educational products on respiratory protection for construction workers.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: More than 20 million workers
are potentially exposed to occupational-disease-causing agents. Currently,
6-12 million workers wear respirators on a routine basis as the final method
of protection and in a wide range of emergency situations. Workers engaged
in the construction trades (e.g., laborers, painters, sand blasters, demolition)
are exposed to a wide variety of airborne contaminants such as silica, asbestos,
lead, and solvent fumes. However, respiratory protection is only as good
as the training the user receives and how well the respirator program is
designed, administered, and used. Many of these construction workers receive
little or no training on the proper selection and use of respiratory protection.
Respirators serve as the major source of protection for many of these individuals,
yet effective respirator use requires considerable training in selecting,
fitting, maintaining, and operating them.
A series of documents have been produced to provide small business owners,
safety professionals, and workers in the construction trades with guidance
in setting up an adequate respiratory protection program. Checklists, sample
forms, and the information needed for proper selection, use, and maintenance
of respirators are a part of the package. In consultation with CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training, specific trades at risk from respiratory hazards
were identified. Drywallers were chosen as the first construction group
for which an instruction package would be prepared on the maintenance and
fitting of respirators and the training needed for an effective respirator
protection program.
KEYWORD: Respirators
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