Benzidine-based dyes: effects of industrial practices, regulations, and world trade on the biological stains market.

Biotech Histochem

Dapson & Dapson LLC, Richland, Michigan 49083, USA.

Published: June 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • The health risks linked to benzidine-based dyes, particularly high rates of bladder cancer among workers and their families, led to significant regulatory changes and a phase-out of these substances in developed countries during the 1970s.
  • In response, developed nations introduced safer alternatives, while emerging countries began producing and exporting carcinogenic dyes at lower prices, shifting the global dye manufacturing landscape.
  • The review aims to raise awareness about the dangers of benzidine dyes, urging companies and users, especially in biomedical applications, to consider potential issues with product composition and variability due to the manufacturing practices of producing countries.

Article Abstract

One of the most sweeping changes in the dye industry since the advent of synthetic dyes grew out of the health risks associated with benzidine. Dyes made from benzidine and its derivatives were used around the world until adverse health effects become incontrovertible. Workers and family members of workers involved in production and use of benzidine-based dyes had a high incidence of bladder cancer. Following publication of several reports documenting this health hazard, dye makers in the USA, Europe, and Japan phased these dyes out of production in the 1970s. Government regulations lent legal support for these voluntary initiatives. Two strategies subsequently evolved to compensate: developed nations brought alternative substances to market while emerging countries increased production of carcinogenic dyes and sold them at discount prices around the world. Nearly all dye manufacturing now has moved away from nations whose costs of production and compliance rendered them unable to compete. The purpose of this brief review is to publicize the health risks associated with dyes made from benzidine and its congeners, and to alert all companies and end users handling these dyes for biomedical applications that composition of the product and lot-to-lot variability may be problematic because of the manufacturing and distribution practices of the countries where they are produced.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10520290902879730DOI Listing

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