Title of article :
Sensory and other neurogenic effects of exposures to airborne office dust
Author/Authors :
L. M?lhave، نويسنده , , S. K. Kj?rgaard، نويسنده , , J. Attermann، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
12
From page :
4755
To page :
4766
Abstract :
This Danish Office Dust Experiment investigated the response of 24 healthy non-sensitive adult subjects to exposure to normal office dust in the air (7 μg m−3 clean air, 136 and 390 μg m−3 TSP). The dust had no major identifiable specific reactive components. The exposure duration was 5 1/4 h and was arranged in a climate chamber in controlled atmospheric conditions. Measurements were made acutely at exposure onset, subacutely at exposure end and next day (late). As secondary aims the time course and threshold of any observed effect of the exposures, and the characteristics of any hyperresponding subgroup were investigated. In a questionnaire with 36 questions the dust exposures caused increased acute, subacute and late perceptions of reduced air quality, acute and subacute increased odor intensity, acute eye irritation, acute and late heavy head, subacute feeling of perspiration, and subacute general irritation. Cough increased subacutely during exposures. In addition, a performance test showed effects of dust exposures which also affected “Mood Scale” ratings. No effect was seen on an addition test for distraction, and objective measurements of skin humidity. The overall conclusion of the study is that healthy subjects without hypersensitivity reactions seem to respond to airborne house dust. The responses are both subjective sensory reactions and other neurogenic effects even at exposure levels within the range found in normal buildings. Some of the effects appeared acutely and decreased through adaptation while others increased during prolonged exposure and remained for more than 17 h after the exposure ended. The findings may indicate for this type of dust a threshold level for the dose–response relationships below 140 μg m−3.
Keywords :
Mood changes , adaptation , noise , Air humidity , Discomfort , Air quality , odors , Accumulation , irritation , Air temperature , house dust , Indoor climate , Carryover
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Record number :
756187
Link To Document :
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