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Health Effects of Hazardous Materials

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• The study of poison & substances that cause harmful effects to living things • Toxic effects can range from minor irritation to lethal effects • Toxins are poisons produced by living o

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Health Effects of Hazardous

Materials

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• The study of poison & substances that cause harmful effects to living things

• Toxic effects can range from minor

irritation to lethal effects

• Toxins are poisons produced by living

organisms (naturally occurring)

• Toxicants are manufactured by humans

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• Dose differentiates a poison and a remedy

• Harmful substances are tested on animals

• How a chemical affects genetic material is determined using microorganisms (i.e

bacteria)

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• Relative ability of a substance to

cause harmful effects to living things

• What quantity does it take to cause damage

• Determined by the chemical makeup, what

elements it contains and how they are combined, how readily it is absorbed and how the body

metabolizes it

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• The longer the exposure the larger the dose

• Protective clothing, equipment and containment can break the exposure chain

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• May cause itching, redness, burns, and

solvents may dissolve skin oils leaving skin more susceptible to the absorption of

chemicals

• The eyes are especially susceptible to harm

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Acute toxicity

• Result of short term exposure

• Causes effects that are felt at the time of exposure or soon thereafter

• Most toxic effects don’t cause permanent, irreversible damage (acute & chronic)

Back to toxicity:

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Chronic toxicity

• Due to long-term exposure

• Effects appear after months or years of exposure

• Cancer, emphysema, or nervous system damage caused by heavy metals, drugs and alcohol are examples of some chronic health effects

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Relative toxicity

• As the dose of a toxic substance increases the

harmful effects are generally expected to increase

• Dose-Response Relationship

• LOAEL: Lowest Observable Adverse Effect Level

- or the lowest dose that causes a lethal effect

• NOAEL - No Observable Adverse Effect Level

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Lethal Dose 50 (LD50)

• Dose at which 50% of the test population dies

• Used with dermal and oral toxicity

• LC50 - Lethal Concentration used for toxicity from inhalation

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Effects other than death!

• The dose or concentration to produce toxic effects in 50% of the population

• Toxic Dosage 50 - TD50

• Toxic Concentration - TC50

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Toxic Effects

• Local Effects – damage caused at the site of first contact with toxicant (eyes, nose,

throat, lungs, skin)

• Systemic Effects – Damage done by

toxicants carried by the bloodstream to vital organs (liver, kidneys, heart, nervous and reproductive system

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Additional factors associated w/

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• Chronic, or long term exposure is

particularly dangerous because some

chemicals build up in the body

• The body does not get a chance to repair itself

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• Chemicals can combine with toxicants and alter their behavior

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Additive Effect

• Most health and safety regulations assume that the effects of two chemicals together is equal to the sum of each alone

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• A subtractive effect

• One substance reduces the effects of another

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• Two chemicals can interact within the body to

produce an effect different from the effect of

either chemical alone, and greater than their sum

• A pack of cigarettes a day or exposure to asbestos increases the chance of lung cancer by six times

• The two exposures together increases one’s risk

by 90 times!

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• Individuals vary in how they react

• Age, sex, inherited traits, diet, state of health, use

of medication, drugs, alcohol and pregnancy

• Includes Allergies

– Some people are affected by a very low dose of a

substance (i.e bee stings)

– Substances that initiate allergic responses are called sensitizers

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Inhalation (Back to Routes of Exposure)

• Most critical route of entry for most

workers handling toxic chemicals

• Quick entry and absorption into the

bloodstream

• Ability of some toxic agents to accumulate

in the respiratory system itself

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• The nose and mouth warm and humidify the air

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• Some particles cause a build up of fibrous

connective tissue

– Emphysema is an example of this type of effect

• Hampers the transfer of oxygen to the bloodstream

• Silica from mining, quarrying and pottery glazing, coal dust and asbestos

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Inhaling dusts or mists

• Harmful particles may be deposited in the bronchi

or the alveoli

• Larger particles may be coughed up but smaller ones remain to cause lung damage

• Particles less than 10 microns penetrate deeper

into the lungs causing bronchitis

• Low level long term exposure to smoke, vehicle exhaust can trigger chronic bronchitis and

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• Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides combine with water vapor in the alveoli forming acids

• Ammonia and chlorine gas can dissolve in the

mucus of the lungs creating caustic solutions

• Injured lung tissue allows liquids to move from the capillaries into the alveoli causing pulmonary edema

• A person can literally drown in their own fluids

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• Our sense of smell does not always warn of exposure

• Carbon monoxide is odorless

• We can become desensitized to some smells after exposure “olfactory fatique”

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Cardiovascular system

• The heart and blood vessels transport

oxygen and nutrients to all parts of the body

• The heart and brain are especially sensitive

to a lack of oxygen

• Waste products are picked up and carried to the lungs and kidneys

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• An iron containing protein in red blood

cells which carry oxygen to the rest of the body

• Some chemicals (i.e.CO) interfere with this process causing chemical asphyxiation

• Hemoglobin has a much greater affinity for

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Digestive and Filtration Systems

• Food and water supply the body with

materials for maintenance and repair and a source of energy

• The digestive system breaks down large

molecules like proteins, complex

carbohydrates and fats

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• Processes chemicals found in the blood traveling from the intestine

• Converts foods into other chemicals,

destroys toxins, manufactures protein and stores glucose

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Liver Disease

• Severe liver disease prevents the organ from rendering toxic chemicals harmless, some which may be normal body chemicals

• When they reach the brain they may cause tremors, confusion or coma

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• Some chemicals are stored in the liver

• The liver can destroy toxic substances like alcohol and nicotine

• If exposure is chronic and long term, cells may be damaged and replaced by fibrous tissue, a condition called cirrhosis

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Bloodstream and Kidneys

• Our body fluids must maintain a balanced amount of potassium, sodium, chloride and calcium ions and blood acids

• The kidneys maintain this balance and filter out waste materials

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• The body must remain hydrated for the kidneys to perform their function

• If the body loses more that 10% of it’s weight in water cells will no longer function and the result is coma & death

• Kidney malfunction causes toxic chemicals to

build up in the bloodstream which can result in

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• Kidney cancers are known to be associated with exposure to some industrial chemicals

• Mercury in waterways is converted to methyl mercury, which is ingested by fish

• If the fish are eaten the chemical inhibits the

kidney’s ability to balance the body’s chemicals which blocks nerve transmissions, Minimata

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Nervous System and Sensory

Organs

• Brain, spinal cord are considered the central

nervous system and process signals from the

peripheral nervous system

• The two types of nerves are motor and sensory

• The autonomic nervous system takes care of all the bodily functions which are in the background

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• Pesticides and metals, such as lead and

mercury, can interfere with the chemical transfer of information

• This may cause tremors, paralysis, loss of reflexes and/or feeling

• Mercury caused “Mad Hatter’s Disease”

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• Must receive a continuous supply of oxygen

• See chart on page 86 for symptoms of

oxygen deficiency

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• Inflammation and infection of the

mucus-membrane lining of the eyelids and eyeballs can

be caused by irritation from chemical pollutants

• Acids and bases are corrosive and can penetrate to the interior of the eye very quickly i.e lime in wall plaster

• Methyl or wood alcohol can cause total blindness

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• The skin protects against the invasion of bacteria, the sun’s rays and the loss of moisture

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• It senses pressure, pain and temperature and

regulates the body’s temperature through blood flow and sweat glands

• Corrosive chemicals can dissolve naturally

protective coatings and/or react with the skin

• Some chemicals, like solvents that` dissolve fats, are absorbed directly into the bloodstream

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• The tendency for cancer to occur

• Cancer is the uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells

• It is first indicated by malignant tumors which tend to invade the surrounding tissue and then spread to distant sites within the body

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• During the 1970’s the public became aware

of the potential for chemicals to cause

cancer

• Studies of chemicals indicate that only a

small number in commercial use cause

cancer

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• One in three people will develop cancer during their lifetime

• Yet only 10 – 15% of these are from occupational exposure to chemicals

• There are 30 chemicals considered to be human carcinogens and 200 that are suspect based on

animal studies

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• A prospective study maintains environmental data

as well as exposure and medical records on

workers as they are exposed

• These studies are difficult in companies where

there is a large turnover of employees because the latency period of many cancers is over 20 years

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Animal testing

• Usually performed on rodents using

procedures endorsed by regulatory agencies like the EPA

• Animals are given doses likely to yield

maximum incidence of tumor formation

then statistical analysis is used to estimate the cancer risk of low doses in humans

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Risk Management

• Government policy is determined by the public’s opinion of acceptable risk and is based on political considerations

– Definition of risk

– What defines acceptable risk

• Risk assessment uses scientific methods to determine the actual level of risk

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Risk/Benefit Analysis

• Used by regulatory agencies in the decision making process

• Subjective concerns such as politics,

lifestyles, freedoms, economics and

progress are considered

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Perception of Risk

• We tend to perceive voluntary risks as less perilous than those we are forced to take i.e smoking

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Risk Assessment

• Evaluating the toxic properties of a

substance and the conditions of human

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National Research Council

Guidelines 1983

• Hazard evaluation - determining the toxic

properties of the substance

• Dose-response relationships - how much it takes to cause negative effects

• Exposure assessment - how much the public is

exposed to and for how long

• Risk characterization – determining a numerical risk factor

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Risk Assessment II

• Risk assessments are required by regulatory agencies when contaminants have been

released into the environment

• Aids in determining acceptable cleanup

levels

Ngày đăng: 30/10/2016, 08:12

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