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Underground salt and potash workers exposed to nitrogen oxides and diesel exhaust: assessment of specific effect biomarkers

Authors :
Lisa Gamrad-Streubel
Lisa-Marie Haase
Katharina K. Rudolph
Katrin Rühle
Annette M. Bachand
Lori Crawford
Kenneth A. Mundt
Jürgen Bünger
Dirk Pallapies
Dirk Taeger
Swaantje Casjens
Anja Molkenthin
Savo Neumann
Jörg Giesen
Volker Neumann
Thomas Brüning
Thomas Birk
Source :
International archives of occupational and environmental health. 95(9)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose Occupational exposure limits (OEL) for nitrogen oxides (NO, NO2) and diesel exhaust (EC-DPM) were reassessed by the German authorities in 2016/2017. We performed a clinical cross-sectional study among salt and potash underground workers exposed to these substances at relatively high levels to examine possible indicators of acute effects on workers’ health. Methods We measured post- versus pre-shift differences in cardiovascular, inflammatory, immune, and respiratory effect biomarkers and assessed their associations with personal exposures measured during the same shift. We also compared post- versus pre-shift differences in biomarker levels between exposure groups defined based on work site and job type. Results None of the above-ground workers exceeded the OEL for NO2 and only 5% exceeded the OEL for EC-DPM exposure. Among underground workers, 33% of miners and 7% underground maintenance workers exceeded the OEL for NO2; the OEL for EC-DPM was exceeded by 56% of miners and 17% of maintenance workers. Some effect biomarkers (thrombocytes, neutrophils, MPO, TNF-α, IgE, FeNO) showed statistically significant differences between pre- versus post-shift measurements; however, there were no consistent associations between pre- and post-shift differences and exposure group or personal exposure measurements during the shift. Conclusions We did not find evidence of associations between workplace exposure to NO, NO2 or EC-DPM and clinically relevant indicators of acute cardiovascular, inflammatory and immune, or respiratory effects among salt and potash underground workers in Germany.

Details

ISSN :
14321246
Volume :
95
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International archives of occupational and environmental health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....02796074934e90c05c97666f5be03939