Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers

<p>Firefighters and asphalt pavers are exposed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) during various work activities. The purpose of this study was to evaluate urinary PAH levels and compare these bio-monitoring levels among firefighters, asphalt pavers, and non-occupationally exposed indi...

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Main Author: Aquino, Theodore
Language:EN
Published: University of South Florida 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10103851
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101038512016-05-26T15:59:59Z Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers Aquino, Theodore Occupational safety|Environmental health|Public health <p>Firefighters and asphalt pavers are exposed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) during various work activities. The purpose of this study was to evaluate urinary PAH levels and compare these bio-monitoring levels among firefighters, asphalt pavers, and non-occupationally exposed individuals. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) urinary PAH levels were used for non-occupationally exposed controls. When compared to the NIST standard for smokers and non-smokers, firefighters demonstrated statistically significant differences in urinary concentration differences for the following metabolites: 2-OH-fluorene, 3-OH-fluorene and 1-OH-pyrene, which were lower in firefighters than the NIST mean for smokers. 1-OHphenanthrene, 2-OH-phenanthrene and 3-OH-phenanthrene were higher among world trade center exposed firefighters than the NIST mean for smokers. When firefighters were compared to the NIST non-smoker standard, firefighters demonstrated elevated levels in all tested PAH biomarkers due to a mixture of smokers and non-smokers in the firefighter cohort. </p><p> Asphalt workers had statistically significant higher urinary concentration elevations in 2OH-fluorene, 1-OH-phenanthrene and 3-OH-phenanthrene as compared to the NIST smoker mean. When asphalt pavers were compared to the NIST non-smoker mean, asphalt pavers had statistically significant increases in all tested PAH biomarkers, with the exception of 2-OHphenanthrene. While firefighters did not demonstrate a substantial change in urinary PAH metabolite levels compared to control populations of smokers and non-smokers, asphalt pavers experienced concentrations that were in some cases increased by orders of magnitude compare to NIST controls. Future research may be needed to evaluate any potential health risk posted to occupational exposed asphalt pavers. </p> University of South Florida 2016-05-20 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10103851 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Occupational safety|Environmental health|Public health
spellingShingle Occupational safety|Environmental health|Public health
Aquino, Theodore
Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers
description <p>Firefighters and asphalt pavers are exposed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) during various work activities. The purpose of this study was to evaluate urinary PAH levels and compare these bio-monitoring levels among firefighters, asphalt pavers, and non-occupationally exposed individuals. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) urinary PAH levels were used for non-occupationally exposed controls. When compared to the NIST standard for smokers and non-smokers, firefighters demonstrated statistically significant differences in urinary concentration differences for the following metabolites: 2-OH-fluorene, 3-OH-fluorene and 1-OH-pyrene, which were lower in firefighters than the NIST mean for smokers. 1-OHphenanthrene, 2-OH-phenanthrene and 3-OH-phenanthrene were higher among world trade center exposed firefighters than the NIST mean for smokers. When firefighters were compared to the NIST non-smoker standard, firefighters demonstrated elevated levels in all tested PAH biomarkers due to a mixture of smokers and non-smokers in the firefighter cohort. </p><p> Asphalt workers had statistically significant higher urinary concentration elevations in 2OH-fluorene, 1-OH-phenanthrene and 3-OH-phenanthrene as compared to the NIST smoker mean. When asphalt pavers were compared to the NIST non-smoker mean, asphalt pavers had statistically significant increases in all tested PAH biomarkers, with the exception of 2-OHphenanthrene. While firefighters did not demonstrate a substantial change in urinary PAH metabolite levels compared to control populations of smokers and non-smokers, asphalt pavers experienced concentrations that were in some cases increased by orders of magnitude compare to NIST controls. Future research may be needed to evaluate any potential health risk posted to occupational exposed asphalt pavers. </p>
author Aquino, Theodore
author_facet Aquino, Theodore
author_sort Aquino, Theodore
title Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers
title_short Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers
title_full Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers
title_fullStr Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Urinary PAHs among Firefighters and Asphalt Pavers
title_sort comparison of urinary pahs among firefighters and asphalt pavers
publisher University of South Florida
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10103851
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