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Biological monitoring of controlled toluene exposure
Authors:Crispin H. Pierce  Russell L. Dills  Michael S. Morgan  Paolo Vicini  David A. Kalman
Affiliation:(1) Department of Environmental Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA Fax: +1-206 543-9616; e-mail: crispo@u.washington.edu, US;(2) Department of Bioengineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA, US
Abstract:
Objectives: Widespread exposure to toluene occurs in the printing, painting, automotive, shoemaking, and speaker-manufacturing industries. The relationship between air concentrations and the absorbed dose is confounded by dermal exposure, personal protective devices, movement throughout the workplace, and interindividual differences in toluene uptake and elimination. Methods: To determine the best biological indicator of exposure we examined the blood and alveolar breath concentrations of toluene as well as the urinary excretion rates of hippuric acid and of o-, m-, and p-cresols from 33 controlled human inhalation exposures to 50 ppm for 2 h. Results: Among the metabolites, o-cresol was least influenced by background contributions, whereas the p-cresol and hippuric acid rates were obscured by endogenous and dietary sources. Toluene levels in alveolar breath proved to be the most accurate and noninvasive indicator of the absorbed dose. A physiologic model described blood and breath data using four measured anthropometric parameters and the fit values of extrahepatic metabolism and adipose-tissue blood flow. Conclusions: After breathing rate and extrahepatic metabolism had been set to conservative (protective) values (the 97.5th and 2.5th percentiles, respectively) the model predicted that pre-final-shift breath levels of ≤10 μmol/m3 and post-final-shift levels of ≤150 μmol/m3 corresponded to average workplace exposure levels of ≤50 ppm toluene. Alternately, we used the distributions and covariances of the measured and fit model parameters to yield conservative pre-final-shift levels of ≤7.3 μmol/m3 and post-final-shift breath levels of ≤120 μmol/m3 that were reflective of workplace exposure levels of ≤50 ppm toluene. Received: 30 December 1997 / Accepted: 12 June 1998
Keywords:Toluene  Biological monitoring  Breath  Occupational exposure  PBPK
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