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Quantitative relation of urinary phenol levels to breathzone benzene concentrations: a factory survey.
  1. O Inoue,
  2. K Seiji,
  3. M Kasahara,
  4. H Nakatsuka,
  5. T Watanabe,
  6. S G Yin,
  7. G L Li,
  8. C Jin,
  9. S X Cai,
  10. X Z Wang

    Abstract

    Urine samples were collected from 64 men and 88 women in shoe factories and printing plants at the end of a seven hour day shift in the latter half of a week in spring. Urine samples were also taken from 43 men and 88 women in the same factories but who were not exposed to solvents. Exposure to benzene during the shift was monitored by passive dosimeters. Both phenol in urine and benzene in activated carbon were analysed with FID gas chromatographs. The urinary concentrations of phenol were linearly related to the time weighted average concentrations of benzene in the breathzone air; the variation was so small that those exposed to 10 ppm benzene could be separated from the non-exposed at least on a group basis when the phenol concentration was corrected either for creatinine concentration or for specific gravity. The urinary phenol concentrations corresponding to 10 ppm benzene were 47.5 mg/l (as observed), 57.9 mg/g creatinine, or 46.6 mg/l (specific gravity 1.016).

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