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The authors examined clinically 1710 women. Among them 199 women with symptoms of menopause were selected and divided into two groups: group I (control) included 80 women without contact with carbon disulphide and group II (examined) included 119 women chronically exposed to carbon disulphide at a concentration of 9.36-23.4 mg/m3. Menopause was present in 16.59% of women chronically exposed to CS2 as compared with 8.05% of the normal population. The mean age at menopause was 48.1 years in group I and 43.9 in group II. Significantly more frequent headaches, weight gain and loss of libido (p < 0.01) were observed in women chronically exposed to CS2. While in the control group fatigue, palpitations and hot flushes were more often (p < 0.001). The concentrations of estrone (p < 0.01), estradiol, progesterone, 17-hydroxy-progesterone, testosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHAS) were significantly decreased in women chronically exposed to CS2 (p < 0.001). No difference in the level of dehydroepiandrosterone was found. The daily excretion of adrenaline and noradrenaline in urine and concentrations of dopamine in plasma of women chronically exposed to CS2 were lower (p < 0.001), while the concentrations of serotonin and prolactin in plasma were higher (p < 0.001). No differences in the level of FSH or LH were noted between the two groups. Significant negative linear correlations between serotonin and FSH (r = -0.45; p < 0.01) serotonin and daily excretion of adrenalin (r = -0.43; p < 0.01) or noradrenalin (r = -0.58; p < 0.001) were found in the exposed group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Effect of carbon disulfide on menopause in women]. 799 46

To understand central nervous damage after long-term exposure to carbon disulfide (CS2), 10 patients who had polyneuropathy with various neuropsychiatric symptoms in a viscose rayon plant were studied. Clinical and laboratory examinations including electroencephalography (EEG), brain computed tomography (CT), brain magnetic resonance images (MRI), and carotid duplex sonography were carried out. Clinically, headache, unpleasant dreams, memory impairment, fatigue, anorexia and emotional lability were common in these patients while 2 patients had stroke episodes. EEGs were all normal. Brain CT scan showed mild cortical atrophy in 3 and low density lesions in the basal ganglia in 3. Brain MRI studies also disclosed mild cortical atrophy in 4 and multiple lesions involving the basal ganglia and corona radiata in 4. Carotid duplex sonography revealed mild atherosclerosis with plaques (< 20% stenosis) of extracranial vessels in 6. However there was no significant difference in flow velocities and flow volumes in the extracranial carotid arteries between patients and the normal controls. Interestingly, 2 patients had multiple brain lesions in the subcortical white matter but without strokes. In conclusion, encephalopathy with possible strokes may occur after chronic exposure to CS2, as well as polyneuropathy. The lesions usually involve the basal ganglia and subcortical white matter. Furthermore, MRI study may detect brain lesions particularly in the subcortical white matter areas before the occurrence of stroke.
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PMID:Chronic carbon disulfide encephalopathy. 895 4

The clinical examinations covered 1710 women. The investigations were performed on 199 women with symptoms of menopause, who were selected and divided into two groups. The first control group (I) included 80 women employed in the Industrial Clothing Factory "Dana" in Szczecin, without contact with carbon disulphide. The second study group (II) comprised 119 women employed in the Synthetic Fibres Factory "Chemitex-Wiskord" and exposed chronically to carbon disulphide in concentration of 9.36-23.4 mg/m3. The microclimate conditions of the production halls in both groups were similar (Tab. 1). Menopause was present in 16.59% of women in the population chronically exposed to carbon disulphide, as compared with 8.05% in the normal population. Mean age at menopause in women of the first group was 48.1 years and 43.9 years in the second group. In the studied group of menopausal women retrospective estimation of menopausal and gestational cycles shows statistically significant increase in abortion and disorders of menstrual cycles (p < 0.001) (Tab. 2). The women chronically exposed to CS2 had significantly more frequently headaches, weight gain and loss of libido (p < 0.001). In the normal group fatigue, palpitations and hot flushes were found significantly more often (p < 0.001) (Tab. 4). The serum concentrations of estrone (p < 0.01), estradiol, progesterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone were significantly decreased in women chronically exposed to CS2 (p < 0.001). No significant differences in the level of FSH or LH were noted between both groups (Tab. 3). The daily excretion of adrenaline and noradrenaline in urine concentrations of dopamine in plasma of women chronically exposed to CS2, was significantly lower (p < 0.001), but the serum concentrations of serotonin (Tab. 5), testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHAS) and prolactin in plasma were significantly higher (p < 0.001). No difference concerning the level in serum of dehydroepiandrosterone and beta-endorfine was found (Tab. 6). Significant negative linear correlations between serotonin and FSH (r = -0.45; p < 0.001), serotonin and daily excretion of adrenaline (r = -0.43; p < 0.01) or noradrenaline (r = -0.58; p < 0.001) were disclosed in the exposed group. In this group a positive correlation was noted between the concentration of serotonin and prolactin (r = 0.45; p < 0.001).
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PMID:[The effect of carbon disulphide on menopause, concentration of monoamines, gonadotropins, estrogens and androgens in women]. 947 21

The work aimed at defining the pattern and frequency of rhythm disturbances in basic brain bioelectric activity in EEG recordings, routinely regarded as normal, in workers exposed to chronic carbon disulfide (CS2) poisoning, without detected symptoms of organic lesions in the nervous system. The study covered 188 viscose spinners occupationally exposed to changing concentrations of CS2 vapours whose mean annual results of measurements ranged between 10 and 35 mg/m3, and the mean individual exposure fell within the range of 9.9-41.6 mg/m3 (mean--25.8 mg/m3). The frequency of alpha rhythm was analysed in EEG recordings with exclusive or nearly exclusive alpha rhythm in two groups studied. The presence or absence of subjective symptoms was taken as a criterion for the selection of subjects. Group I was composed of 116 subjects with subjective symptoms. Group II consisted of 72 workers with neither subjective nor objective symptoms. The age in group I ranged from 26 to 65 years (mean, 48.7 years), and the duration of employed from 5 to 39 years (mean, 23.3 years). The complaints reported were of neurasthenic and polyneuropathic type. The age in group II ranged from 28 to 63 years (mean, 49.4 years), the duration of occupational exposure accounted for 8-43 years (mean, 25.6 years). The control group included 194 persons with EEG routinely regarded as normal, matched by gender, age and work shift distribution. The subjects in Group I reported most frequently the following complaints: headache (72.4%), vertigo (48.3%), increased emotional irritability (42.2%), dysmnesia (36.2%), sleep disorders (27.6%), concentration difficulties (25.9%), limb pains (36.2%) and paraesthesia (27.6%). In the groups of subjects chronically exposed to CS2, both with subjective neurological symptoms, and without subjective or objective neurological symptoms, EEG recordings, routinely regarded as normal, did not reveal constant and symmetrical frequency of alpha rhythm waves. EEC recordings in the CS2 exposed workers with subjective neurological symptoms revealed almost constant frequency (12.9%) or slightly fluctuating frequency (41.4%) in 54.3% of subjects. In 45.7% of subjects considerable fluctuation of alpha rhythm frequency at the range of 3-4 Hz was found. Frequency disturbances applied to both sides, however, they were more pronounced in the leftside leads. Statistical analysis showed, neither in Group I nor in Group II, significant relationship between the pattern of alpha rhythm frequency fluctuations, the duration of CS2 exposure and the cumulative exposure index. Substantial and asymmetric fluctuations of alpha rhythm frequency found in the exposed group of subjects with subjective symptoms were considered as subclinical disturbances in the function of the central nervous system.
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PMID:Rhythm patterns of basic brain bioelectric activity in workers chronically exposed to carbon disulfide. 957 68

Introduction. The objective was to evaluate the toxicity of poisoning by metam sodium, a dithiocarbamate fumigant, the breakdown products of which are methyl isothiocyanate (MITC), carbon disulphide (CS2), and dihydrogen sulphide (H2S). Methods. This is a retrospective, observational case series of metam sodium exposure cases reported to the Angers Poison and Toxicovigilance Centre from 1992 through 2009. Results. A total of 106 cases of metam sodium exposure were recorded and 102 cases were included in this study. All cases of exposure were unintentional. Occupational poisoning occurred in eight cases. The most common route of exposure was inhalation (n = 96). In 79 cases, the patients were people living near fields where metam sodium had recently been applied. Most of the reported symptoms involved irritation of the eyes (n = 76), throat and nose (n = 65), attributable to MITC. Cough and dyspnoea occurred in four cases but no persistent, irritant-induced asthma or persistent exacerbation of asthma was observed. Sixteen patients at two different sites of pollution were exposed to emanations from the drainage system in their homes following the illicit discharge of metam sodium into the sewers. Most presented with nausea and headaches, but only four experienced eye or throat irritation. A breakdown product other than MITC was involved: air analysis at one site revealed the presence of CS2 (337 mg/m(3)) and no H2S. Two of these patients, who had consumed some alcohol, experienced dysgeusia but no disulfiram-like reaction. The only lethal case recorded was a truck driver who was found dead of acute lung injury after falling into a tank that had previously contained metam sodium. Two patients who ingested a dilute solution, presented with mild epigastric pain. Four skin exposures caused erythema (n = 2), moderate burns (n = 1), and urticaria (n = 1). According to the poisoning severity score, their symptoms were minor in 99% of cases. Conclusion. Acute metam sodium exposure usually causes minor symptoms. They vary as a function of the circumstances of exposure, which determine the degradation product that forms. On contact with moist soil, metam sodium decomposes into MITC and causes irritant symptoms. Under specific conditions, such as a spillage in the drainage system, metam sodium can degrade into CS2 and cause neurological signs.
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PMID:Metam sodium intoxication: the specific role of degradation products--methyl isothiocyanate and carbon disulphide--as a function of exposure. 2174 Jan 40