Abstract
In this report of a 5-yr longitudinal study of workers at six cotton textile mills, exposure and acrossshift FEV1 changes were evaluated as possible predictors of the annual change in FEV1 for yarn manufacturing workers. A total of 611 workers had three repeatable spirometric tests, over at least 3yr, and at least one (average of three) across-shift test, while always working the same shift. The "same shift" criterion controlled for the effect of diurnal variation. Average exposure was determined from measures of lint-free elutriated cotton dust in combination with job histories. This study found a significant association between the acute and chronic effects of cotton dust exposure. Both exposure and across-shift change proved to be significant predictors of annual change, and excess annual declines in FEV1 were predicted even for exposures of 200μg/m3 and across-shift drops in FEV1 of 200 ml. These results suggest that, to prevent dust-related chronic decline in lung function, current smokers should be excluded from yarn manufacturing work and exposure should be reduced below 200 μg/m3, to approximately 100 μg/n3.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Becklake, M. R. (1995). Relationship of acute obstructive airway change to chronic (fixed) obstruction. Thorax, 50(SUPPL.1). https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.50.Suppl_1.S16
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