18 results match your criteria: "Center for Occupational Toxicology[Affiliation]"

To evaluate the effects of environmental asbestos exposure on the inducement of lung cancer, pulmonary asbestos and non-asbestos fiber content was determined in 36 normal Korean subjects and 38 lung cancer subjects with no known occupational history of asbestos exposure. Pulmonary asbestos fiber content was measured by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) with energy-dispersive x-ray analysis after applying a low-temperature ashing procedure. Chrysotile fibers were the major fiber type found in the lungs of the Korean subjects.

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The shortening of the MRI T1 relaxation time, indicative of a high signal intensity in a T1-weighted MRI, is known as a useful biomarker for Mn exposure after short-term welding-fume exposure. A previous monkey experimental study found that the T1 relaxation times decreased time-dependently after exposure, and a visually detectable high signal intensity appeared after 150 days of exposure. The nadir for the shortening of the T1 relaxation time was also previously found to correspond well with the blood Mn concentration in welders, suggesting a correlation between a prolonged high blood Mn concentration and shortened T1 relaxation time.

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Welders are at risk of being exposed to high concentrations of welding fumes and developing pneumoconiosis or other welding-fume exposure-related diseases. Among such diseases, manganism resulting from welding-fume exposure remains a controversial issue, as although the movement of manganese into specific brain regions has been established, the similar movement of manganese presented with other metals, such as welding fumes, has not been clearly demonstrated as being similar to that of manganese alone. Meanwhile, the competition between Mn and iron for iron transporters, such as transferrin and DMT-1, to the brain has also been implicated in the welding-fume exposure.

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Three groups of male F344 rats were exposed to a water-soluble metal working fluid (MWF) aerosol at concentrations of 20, 60 or 180 mg/m3 for 6 h/day, five days a week, for 13 weeks in inhalation chambers. The aerosol particles were normally distributed and the mass median aerodynamic diameter was 1.56 microm.

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Chromosome aberration and lipid peroxidation in chromium-exposed workers.

Biomarkers

June 2005

Center for Occupational Toxicology, Occupational Safety & Health Research Institute, Korea Occupational Safety & Health Agency, 104-8 Munji-dong, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-380, Korea.

Chromosome aberration frequency and lipid peroxidation levels were analyzed to investigate their efficacy as biological markers for monitoring the genotoxicity and oxidative damage in Korean chromium (Cr)-exposed workers. Fifty-one Cr-exposed workers and 31 age-matched controls in ten chrome-plating plants were sampled. The Cr level was measured in the workers' blood and urine, and in the ambient air at the workplaces.

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Welders with radiographic pneumoconiosis abnormalities have shown a gradual clearing of the X-ray identified effects following removal from exposure. In some cases, the pulmonary fibrosis associated with welding fumes appears in a more severe form in welders. Accordingly, for the early detection of welding-fume-exposure-induced pulmonary fibrosis, the gene expression profiles of peripheral mononuclear cells from rats exposed to welding fumes were studied using suppression-subtractive hybridization (SSH) and a cDNA microarray.

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Rats were exposed for 6 h per day in inhalation chambers to a 10 mg/m(3) concentration of metalworking fluid (MWF) contaminated with endotoxin at concentrations of 1813 (low dose) and 20,250 eu/m(3) (high dose) 5 days per week for 8 weeks. It was found that 94.7% of the MWF aerosol particles had diameters in the range of 0.

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Male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to a water-soluble metal working fluid (MWF) (5% v/v) contaminated with endotoxins (10,000 eu/ml or 100,000 eu/ml) at 10 mg/m3 for six hours per day for three days (acute exposure) or two weeks (subacute exposure). The geometric mean diameter of the MWF aerosols was 1.56 microm, and the airborne endotoxin concentrations ranged from 1,231 to 2,173 eu/m3 (10,000 eu/ml in the bulk MWF) for the low dose and 19,263-27,386 eu/m3 (100,000 eu/ml in the bulk MWF) for the high dose.

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Inflammatory and genotoxic responses during 30-day welding-fume exposure period.

Toxicol Lett

December 2004

Center for Occupational Toxicology, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency, 104-8 Munji-dong, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-380, Republic of Korea.

Welder's pneumoconiosis has generally been determined to be benign and unassociated with respiratory symptoms based on the absence of pulmonary-function abnormalities in welders with marked radiographic abnormalities. In previous studies, the current authors suggested a three-phase lung fibrosis process to study the pathological process of lung fibrosis and found that the critical point for recovery was after 30 days of welding-fume exposure at a high dose, at which point early and delicate fibrosis was observed in the perivascular and peribronchiolar regions. Accordingly, the current study investigated the inflammatory and genotoxic responses during a 30-day period of welding-fume exposure to elucidate the process of fibrosis.

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Welder's pneumoconiosis has generally been determined as benign based on the absence of pulmonary function abnormalities in welders with marked radiographic abnormalities. Yet, there have also been several reports on welders with respiratory symptoms, indicating lung function impairment, X-ray abnormalities, and extensive fibrosis. Accordingly, this study attempted to investigate the inflammatory responses and pulmonary function changes in rats during a 60-day welding-fume-inhalation exposure period to elucidate the process of fibrosis.

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Subchronic inhalation toxicity of soluble hexavalent chromium trioxide in rats.

Arch Toxicol

July 2004

Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, Center for Occupational Toxicology, 108-4 Munji-dong, Yusong-ku, 305-380, Daejeon, Korea.

We performed a 90-day repeated-dose inhalation toxicity study of soluble hexavalent chromium trioxide (CrO3 (VI)). Male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were exposed to doses of CrO3 in the form of 0.5 approximately 5.

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Micronuclei induction by 13 week-inhalation of 1,1-dichloro-1-fluoroethane in Sprague-Dawley rats.

Toxicol Lett

January 2004

Center for Occupational Toxicology, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency, 305-380 Daejeon, South Korea.

To investigate the genotoxic effect of l,1-dichloro-1-fluoroethane (HCFC-141b), which was currently widely used as a cleaning solvent in the electronic parts industry and suggested as a potential reproductive effector, in vivo micronucleus tests were performed. Groups of 10 male and 10 female Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed, by inhalation (6h/day, 5 days/week) to the vapors of HCFC-141b for 13 weeks using whole body exposure chambers at the concentrations of 0 (control), 1500, 3000, and 6000 ppm. The micronuclei frequencies among the polychromatic erythrocytes (PCEs) and the percentage of polychromatic erythrocytes among the total number of erythrocytes were counted in the bone marrow of rats, and body weights, organ weights, histopathology, clinical chemistry and hematologic changes were also observed.

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Manganese distribution in brains of Sprague-Dawley rats after 60 days of stainless steel welding-fume exposure.

Neurotoxicology

December 2003

Center for Occupational Toxicology, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, Korea Occupational Safety Health Agency, 104-8 Munji-dong, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-380, South Korea.

Welders working in a confined space, as in the shipbuilding industry, are at risk of being exposed to high concentrations of welding fumes and developing pneumoconiosis or other welding-fume exposure related diseases. Among such diseases, manganism resulting from welding-fume exposure remains a controversial issue, as the movement of manganese into specific brain regions has not yet been clearly established. Accordingly, to investigate the distribution of manganese in the brain after welding-fume exposure, male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to welding fumes generated from manual metal arc-stainless steel (MMA-SS) at concentrations of 63.

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According to the toxicological and epidemiological studies, hexavalent chromium (Cr) is associated with increase of lung cancer risk. Genotoxic effects, such as chromosomal aberrations, and cellular oxidative DNA damage by reactive oxygen species produced by hexavalent Cr exposure may play an important role in its carcinogenesis. To clarify whether reactive oxygen species are involved in its mechanism, we examined the levels of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanine (8-OH-dG) and its base excision repair activities in the lung tissues of rats that repeatedly inhaled a sodium chromate solution mist for 1, 2, and 3 weeks.

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Welders with radiographic pneumoconiosis abnormalities have exhibited a gradual clearing of the X-ray identified effects following removal from exposure. In some cases, the pulmonary fibrosis associated with welding fumes appears in a more severe form in welders. Accordingly, to investigate the disease and recovery process of pneumoconiosis induced by welding-fume exposure, rats were exposed to welding fumes with concentrations of 63.

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Recently, a worker with lung carcinoma and a metastatic brain tumor was diagnosed as having a work-related disease. He had been employed in a non-asbestos textile company for 25 years. Consequently, to identify and explore possible causative agents for lung cancer in a non-asbestos textile manufacturing company and establish a causal relationship between exposure and lung cancer, an epidemiological investigative study was conducted and the work processes the worker was engaged in were examined.

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In this report, the process of designating a GLP facility by the Korean Ministry of Environment (MOE) is described in detail using the case of the Center of Occupational Toxicology (COT). The COT, which had been prepared as a GLP facility, filed an application to the National Institute of Environmental Research (NIER) of the MOE. The GLP system of the COT was evaluated by a harmonized evaluation team that consisted of several authorities including the NIER, the National Institute of Agricultural Science and Technology (NIAST), and the National Institute of Toxicological Research (NITR).

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Lung fibrosis in Sprague-Dawley rats, induced by exposure to manual metal arc-stainless steel welding fumes.

Toxicol Sci

September 2001

Center for Occupational Toxicology, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency, 104-8 Moonji-dong, Yusung-gu, Taejon, 305-380, Korea.

To investigate the disease process of pneumoconiosis induced by welding-fume exposure, a lung fibrosis model was established by building a stainless steel arc welding fume generation system and exposing male Sprague-Dawley rats for 90 days. The rats were exposed to welding fumes with concentrations of 57-67 mg/m3 (low dose) and 105-118 mg/m3 (high dose) total suspended particulates for 2 h per day in an inhalation chamber for 90 days. The concentrations of the main metals, Fe, Mn, Cr, and Ni, were measured in the welding fumes, plus the gaseous compounds, including nitrous gases and ozone, were monitored.

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