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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A comparison of
toluene
and ethanol (EtOH) induced changes in central nervous system (CNS) function and symptoms were evaluated in two studies, and when possible the effects of
toluene
were expressed in EtOH equivalent units. The
toluene
concentrations were 0, 75, and 150 ppm, bracketing the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists threshold limit value (ACGIH TLV) of 100 ppm. The socially relevant EtOH doses were 0.00, 0.33, and 0.66 g EtOH/kg body weight, equivalent to two and four 3.5% 12 ounce beers. Forty two paid college students were used in each study. In the first study, subjects were exposed to
toluene
and an odour masking agent menthol (0.078 ppm) for seven hours over three days. In the second study EtOH or a placebo was administered at 1530 across three days also in the presence of menthol. Verbal and visual short term memory (Sternberg, digit span, Benton, pattern memory), perception (pattern recognition), psychomotor skill (simple reaction time, continuous performance, symbol-digit, hand-eye coordination, finger tapping, and critical tracking), manual dexterity (one hole), mood (profile on mood scales (POMS),
fatigue
(
fatigue
checklist), and verbal ability were evaluated at 0800, 1200, and 1600. Voluntary symptoms and observations of sleep were collected daily. A 3 x 3 latin square design evaluated solvent effects simultaneously controlling for learning and dose sequence. An analysis of variance and test for trend were performed on am-pm differences reflecting an eight hour workday and on pm scores for each solvent, in which subjects were their own control Intersubject variation in absorbance was monitored in breath. A 5 to 10% decrement was considered meaningful if consistent with a linear trend at p less than 0.05. At 150 ppm
toluene
, losses in performance were 6.0% for digit span, 12.1% for pattern recognition (latency), 5% for pattern memory (number correct), 6.5% for one hole, and 3% for critical tracking. The number of headaches and eye irritation also increased in a dose-response manner. The greatest effect was found for an increasing number of observations of sleep. A range of 2 to 7% decrements suggest the ACGIH TLV of 100 ppm
toluene
may be a good estimate of the biological threshold supporting a re-evaluation of the TLV. At 0.66 g EtOH/kg body weight symptoms and performance decrements were 6.6% for digit span, 9.2% for pattern recognition, 4.0% for continuous performance, 7.9% for symbol-digit, 16.5% for finger tapping, 6.2% for critical tracking, and 5.2% for the one hole test. The EtOH equivalents at 150 ppm
toluene
for digit span (0.56g EtOH/kg/body weight), the latency for pattern recognition (0.66 g EtOH kg body weight), and the one hole element "move" (0.37 g EtOH kg body weight) show that the first two measures would be affected at or above the 50 mg% blood alcohol concentration. This concentration is recognised as the lowest alcohol concentration associated with increased numbers of automobile accidents. The results suggest that EtOH may be a useful acute standard to compare the effects of various industrial solvents and support investigating an association between exposure to solvents and increased risk to safety in industry.
...
PMID:Acute behavioural comparisons of toluene and ethanol in human subjects. 195 53
In 1985, 30 rotogravure printers exposed to
toluene
for 4-43 years (median 29) were examined by means of interviews and psychometric testing. They were 33-61 years of age (mean 50). Comparisons were made with a reference group of 72 men aged 27-69 (mean 47). The referents had never been exposed to solvents and were all in good health. The printers were employed by two Swedish companies. The mean exposure levels were 43 and 157 mg/m3 of
toluene
, respectively, at the two printing shops. Before 1980 the exposure levels had exceeded 300 mg/m3. On Monday mornings, before psychometric testing at the department of occupational medicine,
toluene
was measured in venous blood samples from most of the exposed subjects. A high proportion of the printers reported
fatigue
(60%), recent short-term memory problems (60%), concentration difficulties (40%), mood lability (27%), and other neurasthenic symptoms. In the psychometric tests their performance was poorer than the reference group's in most of the tests applied. Even performance on the synonyms test, usually considered resistant to mild brain affliction, was worse in the group of printers. Adjusting for this difference in the group comparisons reduced the group differences substantially. Alcohol consumption above 200 g/week was found to reduce the subjects' psychometric function more than
toluene
exposure. The printers' sum of neurasthenic complaints correlated negatively with their score in several tests. Exposure variables showed only weak associations with test results. Blood
toluene
levels were positively correlated with scores in spatial tests. The direction of the correlations suggests that the influence of acute pharmacologic effects is undetectable on Monday mornings before work. In conclusion, we found that exposure to
toluene
at levels below 157 mg/m3 following long-term exposure did induce neurasthenic problems and might reduce psychometric test performance.
...
PMID:Neurasthenic complaints and psychometric function of toluene-exposed rotogravure printers. 275 Jul 52
An acute inhalation chamber study of 42 college students was performed to investigate the relation between exposure to 0, 75, and 150 ppm of
toluene
and changes in central nervous system function and symptoms. Paid subjects were exposed for seven hours over three days. Verbal and visual short term memory (Sternberg, digit span, Benton, pattern memory); perception (pattern recognition); psychomotor skill (simple reaction time, continuous performance, digit symbol, hand-eye coordination, finger tapping, and critical tracking); manual dexterity (one hole); mood (profile of mood scales (POMS];
fatigue
(
fatigue
checklist); and verbal ability were evaluated at 0800, 1200, and 1600 hours. Voluntary symptoms and observations of sleep were collected daily. An analysis of variance and test for trend was performed on the difference and score for each concentration reflecting an eight hour workday where each subject was their own control. A 3 x 3 Latin square study design evaluated
toluene
effects simultaneously, controlling for learning across the three days and the solvent order. Intersubject variation in solvent uptake was monitored in breath and urine. A 5-10% decrement in performance was considered significant if it was consistent with a linear trend at p less than 0.05. Adverse performance at 150 ppm
toluene
was found at 6.0% for digit span, 12.1% for pattern recognition (latency), 5.0% for pattern memory (number correct), 6.5% for one hole, and 3.0% for critical tracking. The number of headaches and eye irritation also increased in a dose response manner. The greatest effect was found for an increasing number of observations of sleep. Overall, no clear pattern of neurobehavioural effects was found consistent with the type 1 central nervous system as classified by the World Health Organisation. Subtle acute effects, however, were found just below and above the ACGIH TLV of 100 ppm
toluene
, supporting the position that the guideline be lowered since the biological threshold of behavioural effects may be comparable with the TLV.
...
PMID:Acute neurobehavioural effects of toluene. 276 22
Nineteen Sewage Treatment Workers (STWs) exposed to industrial sewage that contained benzene,
toluene
, and other organic solvents at a primary sewage treatment plant in New York City (Plant A) were examined for evidence of solvent toxicity. Fourteen (74%) complained of central nervous system (CNS) symptoms consistent with solvent exposure, including lightheadedness,
fatigue
, increased sleep requirement, and headache. The majority of these symptoms resolved with transfer from the plant. Men working less than 1 yr at Plant A were more likely to complain of two or more CNS symptoms than men who were working there longer than 1 yr (p = .055). Objective abnormalities in neurobehavioral testing were found in all 4 men working longer than 9 yr at this plant, but in only 5 of 15 employed there for a shorter period (p = .03). These results are consistent with the known effects of solvent exposure. Occupational health personnel must be aware that STWs can be exposed to solvents and other industrial wastes.
...
PMID:Neurotoxic effects of solvent exposure on sewage treatment workers. 341 51
One hundred and sixty rotogravure printing workers exposed mainly to
toluene
are compared (clinical examination, liver and kidney tests) to 38 unexposed workers. The exposure to
toluene
is assessed by personal air sampling at the workplace (mean: 54 ppm) and by analysis of hippuric acid in urine (mean: 1.86 g/g creatinine).
Fatigue
, alcohol intolerance, mouth dryness appear more frequently among the exposed subjects. Differences observed in liver tests are difficult to relate to
toluene
exposure. The additional eight-year health surveillance of 18 workers shows no significant changes in liver and kidney functions.
...
PMID:[Preventive examinations in the rotogravure printing industry]. 371 16
The influence on the kinetics of
toluene
from long-term occupational exposure, cigarette smoking, and ethanol consumption was studied in 26 male spray painters. A group of spray painters with reported subjective symptoms such as concentration deficits,
fatigue
, and dizziness due to the solvent exposure did not differ in the uptake and disposition of
toluene
from a group of spray painters with no symptoms. In occupationally exposed workers, a tendency for an enhanced clearance of
toluene
from the blood was observed in relation to personal habits such as smoking and/or moderate chronic ethanol intake. Long-term occupational exposure to a mixture of organic solvents does not exert any effect on the metabolic rate of
toluene
as compared with that of an unexposed group.
...
PMID:Toxicokinetics of toluene in occupationally exposed volunteers. 382 7
The acute effects of
toluene
were studied in 43 male printers and 43 control subjects matched according to sex, age, educational level, and smoking habits. The mean age of the subjects was 36 (range 29-50) years. The printers had been exposed to solvents for 9 to 25 years during employment at flexo and rotogravure printing plants, while the controls had no history of solvent exposure. Each subject was exposed once in a climate chamber to either 100 ppm of
toluene
or clean air for 6.5 h preceded by a 1-h acclimatization period. The effects of
toluene
were measured from subjective votes with linear analogue rating scales on 16 items, and on the performance of 10 different tests measuring psychomotor skills, perceptual skills, and vigilance. Exposure to 100 ppm of
toluene
compared with exposure to clean air caused discomfort with complaints of low air quality, strong odor,
fatigue
, sleepiness, a feeling of intoxication, and irritation of the eyes, nose and throat. Furthermore, the subjects exposed to
toluene
showed decreased manual dexterity, decreased color discrimination, and decreased accuracy in visual perception. There was no significant difference in the effects of
toluene
on printers compared to those of
toluene
on controls, but tendencies toward a greater sensitivity were seen for the printers in two tests.
...
PMID:Response of solvent-exposed printers and unexposed controls to six-hour toluene exposure. 405 90
It is accepted knowledge today that repeated intoxication with organic solvents damages the central nervous system and causes persistent psycho-organic symptoms. That long-term but low-level occupational exposure--typical o painters and other blue-collar workers--can also induce such disorders has not generally been recognized. The present epidemiological study was undertaken to evaluate the possible neuropsychiatric effects of such exposure. 80 laquerers exposed to a mixture of industrial solvents (average hygienic effect 0.3) and 37 printers exposed almost only to
toluene
(average hygienic effect 1.0) were compared with a control group of 80 age-matched non-exposed subjects. In psychiatric interviews, the painters showed more mental symptoms.
Fatigue
, nervousness and lack of manual dexterity were most important and formed a typical neurasthenic syndrome. A general decrease in conduction velocity and action potential amplitude was also observed for the peripheral nerves. The printers showed a large decrease of the nerve action potential amplitude only for the sural nerve. No EEG abnormalities were found. Nor could any increase in mental symptoms be detected through psychiatric interviews compared to the controls. The results are interpreted as evidence for a CNS affection with consequent neuropsychiatric signs and symptoms after long-term occupational exposure to mixtures of industrial solvents below the current threshold limit values (TLV) but not after exposure to a single substance like
toluene
at about the TLV. The differential effects may be explained by synergistic amplification of the toxicity of solvent mixtures.
...
PMID:Psychiatric and neurological symptoms in workers occupationally exposed to organic solvents--results of a differential epidemiological study. 657 86
This case report contains the history of a man's exposure to benzene, trichloroethylene, and
toluene
. J suffered acutely from classic symptoms of toxic exposure to these compounds, such as
fatigue
, clumsiness, staggering, and hematopoietic depression. During his medical hospitalization, he was exposed to further organic insults, such as being treated with medications like Cytoxan and medications to treat an abscess in his right parietal lobe. After the acute exposure and after the abscess had resolved, his functioning on neuropsychological testing was still depressed, as he had a Full Scale IQ of 105, whereas at the time of the forensic evaluation he had a Full Scale IQ of 114. It would therefore appear that he did have some mild deficits when originally discharged from the hospital. While he reported having continual mental status changes at the time of the offense and even at the time of the forensic evaluation, it was not felt that these played a significant role in the commission of the offense. Comprehensive forensic evaluation suggested that psychological reactions to his illness and an underlying personality disorder were more direct contributors to the criminal acts. J was therefore recommended and ultimately found to be responsible for his behavior, according to the law.
...
PMID:Criminal responsibility and solvent exposure. 893 24
This study evaluates the chronic effects on the central nervous system of exposure to low concentrations of
toluene
(TWA < 20 ppm) on workers in a rotogravure plant. Ninety-eight male workers from a selection pool of 107 (92%) were examined neuropsychologically using a Cognitive Function Scanner, and neurologically by computerized methods measuring co-ordination ability, tremor and position stability. In addition measures of symptoms and former exposure were obtained by questionnaire. The workers were divided into three groups: Group 0 with no exposure to organic solvents (n = 19); Group 1 with exposure to TWA < 20 ppm of
toluene
for less than 13 years (n = 30) and Group 2 with exposure for more than 12 years (n = 49). Within Group 2, 37 (75%) had been exposed at levels exceeding 100 ppm for 10+ years before 1983. No significant differences were found between Group 0 and Group 1 regarding symptoms and results of the applied tests. Group 2 differed significantly from the two other groups in scoring higher on a symptom index (p = 0.04), particularly regarding concentration ability, reduced memory and
fatigue
. Group 2 scored significantly poorer on tests for visuospatial function, number learning and word recognition, while no differences regarding neurological functions were observed. The study showed no differences regarding neuropsychological and neurological functions between a non-exposed group of male workers and workers exposed to
toluene
less than 13 years at TWA < 20 ppm. However, long-term exposure to TWA (time weighted average) of
toluene
exceeding 100 ppm was associated with impaired neuropsychological function.
...
PMID:Risk of chronic effects on the central nervous system at low toluene exposure. 1062 47
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