REFERENCE VALUES FOR BLOOD BENZENE IN THE OCCUPATIONALLY UNEXPOSED GENERAL-POPULATION

被引:57
作者
BRUGNONE, F
PERBELLINI, L
MARANELLI, G
ROMEO, L
GUGLIELMI, G
LOMBARDINI, F
机构
[1] Institute of Occupational Medicine, University of Verona
关键词
BLOOD BENZENE CONCENTRATION; REFERENCE VALUE; SMOKING; OCCUPATION; RESIDENCE;
D O I
10.1007/BF00380906
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Blood benzene was determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in 431 "normal" subjects, subdivided into 155 rural subjects and 276 urban subjects. Blood benzene (mean value 262 ng/l) was significantly lower in rural (200 ng/l) than in urban (296 ng/l) workers, as well as differing significantly between 293 non-smokers and 138 smokers (205 ng/l and 381 ng/l, respectively). Among non-smokers, values were significantly higher (307 ng/l) in 76 chemical workers. In the total study population, in 95% of cases blood benzene was less than 718 ng/l, the 95 th percentile being 514 ng/l in non-smokers vs 901 ng/l in smokers and 576 ng/l in rural vs 822 ng/l in urban subjects. Within each population subgroup, the difference between non-smokers and smokers was statistically significant, except among office workers (non-smokers 234 ng/l, smokers 304 ng/l). Blood benzene (y) was directly proportional to the number of cigarettes smoked (x) (y = 201 + 12x; r = 0.44; n = 431), and inversely proportional to the interval between the last cigarette and the time at which the blood sample was taken (z) (log y = 6.167 - 0.0015z; r = -0.461; n = 135). The blood half-life of benzene was about 8h. The multiple correlation between blood benzene (Cb), number of cigarettes per day (x) and time since the last cigarette (z) is: Cb = 417 + 7.2x - 0.41z (n = 135; R = 0.20; P < 0.00001).
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页码:179 / 184
页数:6
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