Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMonica Townson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Those hazards which may cause measurable changes in the body or its functions
2
Physical Chemical Biological Ergonomic Psychosocial Other(surfaces, flammables, heights, tips)
3
H.R.Sarreshtahdar, MD Occupational Medicine Specialist
4
Chemical hazards ◦ Chemicals are the most common and significant health hazards ◦ Chemicals can be hazardous for numerous reasons and can combine with other chemicals to make new hazards
5
Ability of the substance to harm the body The dose makes the poison Toxicity Depends on : Amount + Duration
6
Entail a risk due to: ◦ Its toxicological properties ◦ Its temperature ◦ Its radioactivity ◦ Displacement of atmospheric oxygen ◦ Increase the risk of fire, explosion, …
7
Carcinogenic Irritant Corrosive Sensitizing Reproductive toxin Genotoxic Asphyxiants
8
IARC Group 1 (carcinogenic) ◦ Benzene, PAH, asbestos, silica Group 2A (probably carcinogenic) ◦ Acrylonytrile, vinyl chloride Group 2B (possibly carcinogenic) ◦ Acrylamide, lead, chloroform Group 3 (not classifiable) Group 4 (probably non-carcinogenic)
9
Causes a REVERSIBLE inflammatory effect on living tissue by chemical action at the site of contact ◦ Formaldehyde, most solvents
10
Causes visible Destruction of or IRREVISBLE alterations in living tissue by chemical action at the site of contact ◦ Phenol, acids and bases
11
Causes a substantial portion of exposed people to develop an Allergic reaction in normal tissue after repeated exposure to the chemical Nickel,
12
Neuro-toxic Cardio-toxic Hepato-toxic Nephro-toxic Hemato-toxic Reproductive toxin Oculo-toxic Oto-toxic Pulmonary toxin Vasculo-toxic Dermato-toxic Immuno-toxic
13
Aerosols: ◦ Dust ◦ Fumes ◦ Smoke ◦ Fiber Gases and vapors Fluids
14
Independent Additive Antagonistic Potentiating Synergistic
15
Inhalation
16
Skin/eye contacts
17
Ingestion
18
Inhalable Particle Mass Thoracic Particle Mass Respirable Particle Mass
19
Physical state Chemical structure Duration of exposure Frequency Route Intensity Environmental (temp/humidity/pressure) Individual factors ◦ race/genetics/immune/nutrition/activity/stress/ background disease
20
Environmental monitoring Biological monitoring
21
Prepared by the chemical manufacturer or importer and describe: ◦ Physical hazards, such as fire and explosion ◦ Health hazards, such as signs of exposure ◦ Routes of exposure ◦ Precautions for safe handling and use ◦ Emergency and first-aid procedures ◦ Control measures
22
Must provide information about the: ◦ Physical and chemical characteristics ◦ Health effects ◦ Exposure limits ◦ Carcinogenicity (cancer-causing)
23
Information of the potential health hazards of chemicals is derived from... 1) Toxicological studies (in vivo, in vitro) 2) Case reports 3) Epidemiological studies
24
Acute oral, dermal or inhalation toxicity Provides information on acute health hazards likely to arise from acute exposure to the substance by the given route, and on the magnitude of acute toxicity of the substance usually these tests are made with rodents, dermal test quite often with rabbits LD50/LC50 values (dose level which is caused death to 50% of animals)
25
Dose-response relationship: lead decreased erythrocyte delta-ALAD activity increased zinc protoporphyrin anemia CNS effects decreased peripheral nerve conductivity Nervous paralysis, lead colics Adapted from Elinder C-G et al., Biologisk monitoring av metaller hos människa. Arbetsmiljöfonden, Uppsala, 1991
26
Metals Solvents Pesticides Gases Other chemicals
27
Lead Nickel Chrome Mercury Cadmium
28
Aliphatic (methan, ethylene, … ) Aromatic (benzene, styrene, toluene, … ) Alcohols Petroleum distillates Ethers Esters
29
Organophosphates Carbamates Organochlorines Pyrethrum, pyrethroid
30
Asphyxiants Simple (CO2, methan, … ) Chemical (CO, H2S, HCN) Toxic gases (arsine, phosphine, phosgen, … )
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.