scholarly journals Increased urine chromium concentrations in a worker exposed to lead chromate due to medicinal herb intake

Author(s):  
Pere Sanz-Gallen ◽  
Beatriz Calvo-Cerrada ◽  
Gabriel Martí-Amengual ◽  
Marisa Ruiz ◽  
Eva Marín ◽  
...  

Background: Hexavalent chromium compounds are sensitizers of the skin and lung. Chronic exposure to hexavalent chromium compounds is associated with respiratory effects and ulceration and perforation of the nasal septum. Such compounds are also considered carcinogens of the lung and nasal and paranasal sinus. Objectives: To demonstrate the importance of studying occupational and non-occupational exposure when assessing the concentration of substances in the urine. Case study: A study was conducted of environmental chromium concentrations in the workplace. In addition, an occupational medical examination was performed, recording activities inside and outside the workplace, eating habits, blood lead and urine chromium at the beginning and end of the workday. Results: One worker exposed to lead chromate presented high chromium concentrations in urine (up to 62 µg/l before the working day and 52 µg/l at the end of the working day). Environmental chromium concentrations in the workplace were below 0.25 µg/m3. In view of the results, a full study was conducted of the patient’s habits outside work. He reported having bought a kilo of a medicinal herb infusion at a street market three weeks previously. The concentration of total chromium in the prepared infusion was 12000 µg/l. The patient stopped consuming the medicinal herb. Subsequently, the urine chromium analysis was below 0.5 µg/l. Discussion and Conclusions: This case is interesting because it demonstrates that the consumption of medicinal herbs can interfere with biological monitoring of workers exposed to hexavalent chromium compounds. This may give rise to confusion and can also create legal problems for companies and workers. It is important to provide advice to workers and to investigate their habits outside work, especially when there is a discrepancy between environmental and biological values. In this case, the increase in urinary chromium is due to the consumption of medicinal herbs.

2004 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 156-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra S. Wise ◽  
Julie H.C. Schuler ◽  
Amie L. Holmes ◽  
Spiros P. Katsifis ◽  
Michael E. Ketterer ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 263-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.J. Wiegand ◽  
H. Ottenwälder ◽  
H.M. Bolt

2013 ◽  
Vol 105 (6) ◽  
pp. E310-E319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chad J. Seidel ◽  
Christopher J. Corwin

2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (1) ◽  
pp. 000345-000351
Author(s):  
Sophia S. Lau ◽  
Joe P. Kuczynski

Due to the adverse health effects of hexavalent chromium, Cr(VI), pigments and other materials containing Cr(VI) were largely banned for use in electrotechnical products under the EU RoHS Directive [1]. While there are several effective methods to determine the presence of total chromium in electrotechnical plastic matrices, a validated compliance test method that is capable of discerning Cr(VI) from the non-regulated forms of Cr(III) is not yet available. One of the challenges in developing a standardized compliance test for Cr(VI) is the low recovery of Cr(VI) compounds from polymer matrices This study identified antimony trioxide (ATO), a common synergist added to enhance the ignition resistance of brominated flame retardants (BFRs), as a source of matrix interference in the quantitative determination of hexavalent chromium extracted from polymer matrices. ATO reduces hexavalent chromium to trivalent chromium prior to complexation of Cr(VI) with diphenylcarbazide (DPC) leading to false negatives. EDTA was found to be an efficient reagent for Sb(III) complexation, thereby suppressing the reduction of Cr(VI) and enabling quantitative Cr(VI) determination in the presence of ATO.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 (1) ◽  
pp. 000146-000150
Author(s):  
Joshua S. Petko ◽  
Philip A. Lovell ◽  
Jeremy D. Clifton ◽  
Paul H. Cohen ◽  
Karl F. Schoch

Abstract Conversion coatings are used to inhibit corrosion on aluminum structures while maintaining electrical conductivity. The most common type of conversion coatings in aerospace applications (MIL-DTL-5541 Type I), contain hexavalent chromium compounds as the corrosion-inhibiting additive. These Type I conversion coatings have a long pedigree and are highly effective in preventing corrosion; however, the hexavalent chromium compounds in these coatings are carcinogenic and water-soluble. Therefore, the use of these compounds is highly regulated in order to protect both workers and the public leading to high cost in both use and disposal. In addition to these regulations, use of these materials on new designs for DOD is prohibited by DFARS 48 CFR Parts 223 and 252, and is scheduled to be prohibited in Europe in September 2017 by REACH regulations. In response, new more environmentally friendly non-hexavalent chromium-based processes are becoming available. Coatings resulting from these types of processes are referred to as MIL-DTL-5541 Type II conversion coatings. The long term reliability and performance impacts resulting from the use of these coatings are not fully understood and there currently is an effort in the aerospace industry organized by NASA to fully define these impacts while hardware is still in the design stage. While significant work has been performed to define the corrosion performance of various type-II conversion coatings, there has been minimal work performed to quantify the impact a type-II conversion coating would have on RF electrical assemblies. Of particular interest is the impact a conversion coating can have on microwave loss at higher frequencies. Many RF electrical assemblies use aluminum radiator and waveguide structures to transfer energy between components and radiate into freespace. If microwave losses increase due to a change in conversion coating, there could be negative impacts to key performance parameters such as system sensitivity, dynamic range, noise figure, and radiated power. Understanding this impact is critical in determining whether the design change impact is isolated only to the conversion coating or whether it propagates to other subcomponents to compensate for the loss in performance. The standard way to quantify the electrical resistance of conversion coatings is defined by MIL-DTL-81706B. The test involves collecting a DC resistance measurement on a processed panel using a two-probe measurement with 200 psi of pressure applied to the probes. The resulting value is averaged from 10 samples of data collected across the panel. While this test in MIL-DTL-81706B is well defined, it has significant limitations that caused this research to seek another way to quantify this value. First, the repeatability of the two-point probe is not consistent across the panel. Some of the conversion coatings can be brittle and can easily be disturbed by the force applied by the probes. The poor repeatability is exacerbated when the test articles are environmentally exposed, leaving a non-uniform surface. Finally, this test methodology is performed at DC, which does not directly quantify the impact of the coating at microwave frequencies due to phenomena such as skin effect and potential plasmonic response. This talk discusses an experiment performed to assess the impact of the use of type-II conversion coatings on microwave loss. In order to assess this impact, a set of precision machined waveguide structures were used as test articles in the experiment. The advantage of using this waveguide-based approach is that it provides a distributed surface to assess the average impact of conversion coatings on surface resistivity. This average resistivity more closely maps to the RF losses seen by microwave systems. In addition, testing the waveguide test article provides a very repeatable test methodology; waveguide technology is very mature from a manufacturing perspective. Also, the waveguide flanges provide a repeatable way to connect to the test article so long as they are masked or cleaned after any potential environmental exposure. Finally, the rectangular shape of the waveguide can be canonically described by a closed form expression, improving understanding of the specific mechanisms leading to the loss. This talk discusses an experiment where multiple 3-foot pieces of WR-28 were used as test articles. The WR-28 test articles were chosen to assess the impact to performance at Ka-band. The 3-foot sections are convenient articles because they can easily be measured on a workbench while at the same time being electrically long at Ka-band (on the order of 100 wavelengths). This talk discusses three different populations of test articles, each coated with a different type of conversion coating. This talk also discusses how an initial measurement of these test articles before environmental exposure showed little difference between these populations. Finally, this talk will discuss plans for environmental testing and in-process RF measurements to be captured during these tests.


2019 ◽  
Vol 121 ◽  
pp. 02011
Author(s):  
Ekaterina Plaskeeva ◽  
Valery Trusov

In marine conditions, especially in the Arctic, the problems of reliability and safety of marine corrosion protection systems are relevant. Reliability can be enhanced by corrosion inhibitors. For the equipment not subject to painting, safe technologies for preservation of water-based compounds are substantiated by bioassay methods. When carrying out painting work carried out by crew members at sea, a simplified chemical surface preparation was proposed with the «NOTEH» phosphating compound with anode inhibitors. The topic of the discussion are the passivation properties of «NOTEH» according to the data on the suppression of corrosion under a layer of paint primer. To increase the safety of work, hexavalent chromium compounds were removed from the inhibiting block of «NOTEH» additives.


1998 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 179 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Al-Hamood ◽  
A. Elbetieha ◽  
H. Bataineh

The reproductive toxicity of trivalent and hexavalent chromium compounds was investigated in male and female mice exposed to 1000 ppm chromium chloride and potassium dichromate via their mother during gestational and lactational periods. Fertility was reduced in male offspring exposed to either trivalent or hexavalent chromium compounds. Body weights and weights of testes, seminal vesicles and preputial glands were reduced in trivalent-exposed male offspring. The exposure of female mice offspring to trivalent and hexavalent chromium compounds delayed sexual maturation. Fertility was reduced in female offspring exposed to either trivalent or hexavalent chromium compounds. The exposure of female mice to hexavalent chromium compound reduced the number of implantations and viable fetuses respectively. Body weight and weights of ovaries and uteri were reduced in trivalent-exposed female offspring. The results indicate that under our experimental conditions, the exposure of male and female mice offspring to either trivalent or hexavalent chromium compounds during gestational and lactational periods impair reproductive functions and fertility in adulthood.


1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (9) ◽  
pp. 275-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Patterson ◽  
E. Gasca ◽  
Y. Wang

This paper describes wastewater treatment optimization studies performed on an industrial wastewater generated in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. The manufacturing plant generates hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] wastewater as a result of chromating brass, bronze and copper parts produced in the manufacturing operations. The facility utilizes a continuous flow treatment train, involving segregated Cr(VI) reduction with sodium metabisulfite (Na2S2O5) under acidic conditions, followed by combined wastestream two-stage pH adjustment, metals precipitation, and clarification before discharge to the municipal sewer. The objectives of the studies were to define and evaluate critical parameters, such as pH and oxidation reduction potential (ORP) for hexavalent and total chromium control and to perform treatability studies to optimize the performance of the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). The treatability studies included Cr(VI) reduction versus Na2S2O5 dosage evaluations and corresponding chromium reduction kinetic studies, and trivalent chromium hydroxide precipitation. The Cr(VI) reduction experiments and chromic hydroxide precipitation studies were performed for three different wastewaters collected from within the manufacturing process; a high, typical, and dilute strength wastewater.


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