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Piperazine-induced airway symptoms: exposure-response relationships and selection in an occupational setting. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study involving 602 workers from a chemical industry handling piperazine (1942-1979) revealed that higher exposure to this secondary amine was linked to increased asthma symptoms, with about a third of those most exposed reporting such issues.
  • Factors such as age, employment duration, and smoking habits influenced the severity of airway symptoms, while atopy did not have a significant impact.
  • There was also a noted correlation between piperazine exposure and chronic bronchitis, affecting about 25% of the most exposed workers, but no differences in symptoms were found between current and former employees, indicating no "healthy worker effect."

Article Abstract

The heterocyclic secondary amine piperazine is known to cause asthma. In a cohort of 602 workers, employed during the period 1942-1979, at a chemical industry where piperazine is handled, a study conducted by means of a mailed questionnaire showed a strong exposure-response relationship as to frequency of work-related airway symptoms indicating asthma. In the most exposed group about a third of the workers had experienced such symptoms. Age, length of employment, smoking habits, and previous work-related asthmatic symptoms, but not atopy, modified the response. Further, there was an association between piperazine exposure and chronic bronchitis. In the most exposed group every fourth subject had chronic bronchitis. The frequency was modified by smoking habits; atopy was a confounder. Although many subjects, especially high-exposed ones, left work because of airway symptoms, there was no difference in occurrence of airway symptoms between former and present employees, ie, no "healthy worker selection" ("survivor population effect").

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajim.4700060505DOI Listing

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