Evaluating risks associated with multiple occupational exposures is no easy task, especially when chemical and physical nuisances are combined. In most countries, public institutions have created databases, which gather extensive information on occupational exposures or work-related diseases. Unfortunately, these tools rarely integrate medical and exposure information, and, above all, do not take into account the possible adverse effects of co-exposures. Therefore, an attempt to exploit and join different existing databases for the assessment of the health effects of multiple exposures is described herein. This case study examines three French databases describing exposures to noise and/or ototoxic chemicals (i.e., toxic to the ear) and the incidence rate of occupational deafness in different sectors. The goals were (1) to highlight occupational sectors where the workers are the most (co)exposed and (2) to determine whether this approach could confirm the experimental data showing that this co-exposure increases the risk of developing hearing loss. The results present data per occupational sector exposing workers to noise only, ototoxic chemicals only, noise and ototoxic chemicals, and neither of these two nuisances. The ten sectors in which the proportion of exposed workers is the highest are listed. This analysis shows that the rate of hearing loss in these sectors is high but does not show an increased incidence of hearing loss in co-exposed sectors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19084455 | DOI Listing |
Front Mol Neurosci
December 2024
School of Basic Medical Science, Jining Key Laboratory of Pharmacology, Jining Medical University, Jining, Shandong, China.
Ear Hear
December 2024
Division of Patient Services Research, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Objectives: Valid wireless automated Békésy-like audiometry (ABA) outside a sound booth that includes extended high frequencies (EHF) would increase access to monitoring programs for individuals at risk for hearing loss, particularly those at risk for ototoxicity. The purpose of the study was to compare thresholds obtained with (1) manual audiometry using an Interacoustics Equinox and modified Hughson-Westlake 5 dB threshold technique to automated audiometry using the Wireless Automated Hearing Test System (WAHTS) and a Békésy-like 2 dB threshold technique inside a sound booth, and (2) ABA measured in the sound booth to ABA measured outside the sound booth.
Design: Cross-sectional study including 28 typically developing children and adolescents (mean = 14.
Zhonghua Lao Dong Wei Sheng Zhi Ye Bing Za Zhi
November 2024
Department of Occupational Health, The Third People's Hospital of Henan Province (Henan Hospital for Occupational Diseases), Zhengzhou 450052, China.
Hidden hearing loss (HHL) is a type of hearing impairment characterized by normal pure tone threshold audiometry (PTA) but impaired speech recognition and coding ability in noisy environments. At present, synaptic and nerve damage is the most likely pathological mechanism of HHL. Noise exposure, aging and ototoxic drugs may affect the occurrence of HHL, but its clinical manifestations and routine examinations have no obvious abnormalities, which may easily lead to missed diagnosis of HHL.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Audiol
November 2024
Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences, Viterbo University, La Crosse, WI.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of noise exposure on otolith function measures of video ocular counter roll (vOCR), ocular vestibular evoked myogenic potential (oVEMP), cervical VEMP (cVEMP), and subjective visual vertical (SVV). Additionally, this study compared the vOCR results with other otolith function measures: cVEMP, oVEMP, and SVV.
Method: This was a cross-sectional, between-group prospective study that compared otolith function tests between noise exposure groups.
Am J Lifestyle Med
April 2024
Federal University of Fronteira Sul - UFSC, Chapecó, Brazil (PH).
Introduction: The most common hearing losses in the population are associated with genetic conditions, use of ototoxic substances or medications, infectious diseases, metabolic diseases and chronic ear diseases and the association of exposure to occupational risks or the natural aging process.
Objective: Verify the association between hearing loss in workers and metabolic diseases.
Method: Retrospective cross-sectional study with analysis of secondary data of subjects exposed to occupational noise and undergoing drug treatment for metabolic disease, attended in two occupational health clinics (C1 and C2) from January 2020 to December 2022, considering the data of reference examinations from the year 2005.
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