Urinary chromium as an indicator of the exposure of welders to chromium

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Abstract

Five welders working with high alloy Cr-Ni steel and one working with mild steel were followed during one work week. The chromium concentration in air was measured concomitantly with urinary chromium determinations. The water-soluble chromium concentrations in air exceeded 0.05 mg/m3 during welding with coated electrodes, but metal inert-gas (MIG) welding produced much lower concentrations. The proportion of water-soluble hexavalent chromium in the air was usually more than 50% of the total chromium concentration during welding with coated electrodes, whereas less than 10% of the chromium produced during MIG welding was in a water-soluble form. Since water-soluble chromium (hexavalent) is the more important biologically, the determination of both water-soluble and water-insoluble chromium concentrations is emphasized instead of the measurement of the total concentration. The urinary chromium concentration proved to be a good indicator of short-term exposure to water-soluble chromium when exposure was above the current threshold limit value of O.O5 mg/m3, concentrations of more than 30 μg/g of creatinine representing an exposure level higher than the threshold limit value.

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Tola, S., Kilpio, J., Virtamo, M., & Haapa, K. (1977). Urinary chromium as an indicator of the exposure of welders to chromium. Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health, 3(4), 192–202. https://doi.org/10.5271/sjweh.2773

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