Issue 6, 1999

Correlation of urinary nickel excretion with observed ‘total’ and inhalable aerosol exposures of nickel refinery workers

Abstract

An investigation of the relationship between observed nickel aerosol exposures and urinary nickel excretion was undertaken at a Scandinavian nickel refinery. The goal of the study was to assess the impact of nickel aerosol speciation, the use of particle size-selective sampling instrumentation and adjustment of urinary levels for creatinine excretion on the usefulness of urinary nickel excretion as a marker for exposure. Urinary nickel measurements and paired ‘total' and inhalable aerosol exposure measurements were collected each day for one week from refinery workers in four process areas. The mean observed urinary nickel concentration was 12 µg L–1 (11 µg of Ni per g of creatinine). The strongest relationships between urinary excretion and aerosol exposure were found when urinary nickel levels were adjusted for creatinine excretion and when exposure to only soluble forms of nickel aerosol was considered. No significant difference was observed between measures of ‘total' and inhalable aerosol in the ability to predict urinary excretion patterns. In the light of these results, it is recommended that consideration be given to the chemical species distribution of nickel aerosol in the use of urinary nickel measurements as a screening tool for cancer risk in occupationally-exposed populations.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Environ. Monit., 1999,1, 557-562

Correlation of urinary nickel excretion with observed ‘total’ and inhalable aerosol exposures of nickel refinery workers

M. A. Werner, Y. Thomassen, S. Hetland, T. Norseth, S. R. Berge and J. H. Vincent, J. Environ. Monit., 1999, 1, 557 DOI: 10.1039/A906597K

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