This study examines the relationship between toner-handling work and its health effects on self-reported respiratory symptoms. The subjects were 1,504 male workers in a Japanese toner and photocopier manufacturing company. Personal exposure measurement, pulmonary function tests, chest X-ray examination, measurement of biomarkers, and a questionnaire about self-reported respiratory symptoms were performed annually. This study discusses the questionnaire results. We found that the toner-handling group showed significantly higher prevalence of breathlessness than the never-toner-handling group. The significant reduction of pulmonary function and fibrosis change in the chest X-ray examination associated with breathlessness were not observed. However the morbidity of asthma was higher compared to the Japanese population in both of the toner-handling group and the never-toner handling group, the effect of toner exposure was not clarified. Nevertheless, while the toner exposure levels in the current well-controlled working environment may be sufficiently low to prevent adverse health effects, further studies are needed to assess the more long-term latent health effects of toner exposure. © 2014 Hiroko Kitamura et al.
CITATION STYLE
Kitamura, H., Terunuma, N., Kurosaki, S., Hata, K., Masuda, M., Kochi, T., … Higashi, T. (2014). A cohort study on self-reported respiratory symptoms of toner-handling workers: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis from 2003 to 2008. BioMed Research International, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/826757
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