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Biologically Derived Airborne Contaminants: Bioaerosols and TLVs ® Kenneth F. Martinez, MSEE, CIH Chair, ACGIH ® Bioaerosols Committee NIOSH
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Where ?
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Microorganisms Obligate parasites (must have a living host) –viruses –bacteria –rickettsia Facultative saprophytes (will utilize dead organic material) –fungi –bacteria
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Size Ranges of Microorganisms
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Mechanisms for Microbial Dispersal Linear Distances
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Microbiological Concerns Infections Immunologic Reactions Toxic Effects
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Infectious Disease Pathogenicity Virulence Relationship between virulence (V), numbers of pathogens or dosage (D), and resistant state of the host (RS) Colonization Invasiveness Infectious Disease = V * D RS
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Infectious Disease Terminology Portal of entry Exposure vs. infection Clinical vs. subclinical or asymptomatic infection Carrier state Opportunistic infection Human pathogen vs. virulence Immunosuppression
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Infectious Disease Pathways Respiratory Oral (via ingestion) Contact Penetration Vectors (via insect bite)
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Allergic Disease Allergic rhinitis Allergic asthma Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis Extrinsic allergic alveolitis (hypersensitivity pneumonitis)
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U.S. Disease Prevalence 1 of 5 Americans suffer from allergic disease Indoor allergens responsible for significant share Environmental control reduces disease severity Source: NHLBI, 1991
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Allergen Exposure Dust Mites Molds Animal Dander Pollen Allergenic Chemicals Other Exposures Viruses Air Pollution Tobacco Smoke Genetic Predisposition or Susceptibility Immunologic Sensitization Allergic Disease MildModerateSevere (Death) Source: Pope AM, et al., eds., 1993
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Important Mycotoxins
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Where Are We?
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Classification of Occupant Complaints Sick Building Syndrome Building-Related Disease Occupant Discomfort
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Sick Building Syndrome Non-specific Symptoms Headache Eye, nose, throat irritation Sneezing Fatigue and lethargy Skin irritation Dizziness and nausea Cough Chest tightness
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Building-Related Disease Known etiologies Related to identifiable exposure Legionnaires Disease Pontiac Fever Humidifier Fever Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis Anthrax
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Why Not Scientifically Supportable? Not a single entity Human responses cover wide range No single sampling method exists No exposure/response relationships exist Total Culturable or Countable Bioaerosols
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Why Not Scientifically Supportable? Data are derived from indicators rather than actual effector agents Concentrations vary widely Low statistical power in cause-effect relationship studies Specific Culturable or Countable Bioaerosols - other than infectious
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Why Not Scientifically Supportable? Dose-response data limited to a few agents Air sampling limited to research Administrative and engineering controls remain the primary defenses Infectious Culturable or Countable Bioaerosols
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Why Not Scientifically Supportable? Some dose-response relationship data available –Experimental studies –Epidemiologic surveys Assay methods improving May be appropriate in the future Assayable biological contaminants
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Questions? Pat Breysse Lisa Brosseau Larry Lowry Tom Bernard Ken Martinez
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