1. [Evoked potentials and psychometric tests in the diagnosis of subclinical neurological damage in a group of workers exposed to low concentrations of mercury vapor].
- Author
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Martínez Vázquez C, Rodríguez Sáez E, Gil Fernández M, Torres Pombo J, Rodríguez M, Iglesias Groba MT, and Herves Beloso C
- Subjects
- Adult, Chemical Industry, Electroretinography drug effects, Evoked Potentials drug effects, Humans, Male, Mercury urine, Mercury Poisoning physiopathology, Mercury Poisoning psychology, Middle Aged, Neurologic Examination methods, Occupational Diseases physiopathology, Occupational Diseases psychology, Psychometrics, Spain, Mercury Poisoning diagnosis, Occupational Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
We study the effects of low concentrations of mercury vapour on the nervous system of a group of eleven workers of a chloroalkali plant exposed to it. Twenty-three non-exposed workers in the same factory were used as control group. We used clinical and analytic explorations, psychometric tests and evoked potentials to evaluate the subjects. The average Hg in urine of the exposed group was 41.74 micrograms/gr creatinine and the average of the non-exposed group as 9.71 mu/yr. In the exposed group the evoked potentials have found a slowing-down of conduction in all the nervous paths studied (optical, auditive and somatosensory) and in the latency of P300 wave, although this was not statistically significant compared to the control group. Of the psychometric test used, only Rey's Complex Figure Test showed deterioration in the visual memory subtest of the exposed group (p < 0.05) compared to the control group, although in Wechsler's digit span test lower scores were obtained which were close to being statistically significant comparing the averages of the two groups (0.05 < p < 0.051). Bearing in mind these results we think that the amounts of Hg in urine and TLV-TWA (50 micrograms/gr creatinine and 50 micrograms/m3 respectively) accepted by most authors as innocuous should be reduced.
- Published
- 1996