Contact dermatitis in cabinet makers

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Abstract

The majority of cases of wood-related skin diseases occur in occupational settings. Several materials are known causes of contact dermatitis in cabinet makers: raw-wood components (bark, sapwood, or heartwood), living organisms (lichens, liverworts, insects), or chemicals (fungicides, preservatives, fire retardants). Contact with wood may cause a skin reaction through chemical irritation, sensitization, or both. The sensitizers found in different woods have largely been members of a few categories: quinones, terpenes, phenols, stilbenes, and other miscellaneous agents. Contact dermatitis to the chemicals involved in the woodworking industry is much more common than reactions to the woods itself. The main chemicals allergens are preservatives and treatments; glues, paints, and lacquers. Other occupation illnesses related to the cabinet-making industry include: contact urticaria, allergic rhinitis, allergic alveolitis, organic dust toxic syndrome, conjunctivitis, bronchitis, and occupational asthma. Erythema multiforme-like reactions have been reported to several wood and plant species, including Dalbergianigra, poison ivy, primula, terpenes, and mugwort. Adenocarcinoma and squamous carcinomas of the sinonasal cavity have also been observed. Clothing and barrier creams may aggravate the problem by proving warmer, moist areas in which the dust may repeatedly become trapped. The best treatment for skin problems caused by the woods or chemicals of the cabinet-making industry is prevention. Topical steroids, anti-histamines, and nasal sprays, and sometime simply avoidance of the chemical comprise the mainstay of treatment.

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De Souza, A., & Cohen, D. E. (2012). Contact dermatitis in cabinet makers. In Kanerva’s Occupational Dermatology, Second Edition (Vol. 3, pp. 1319–1326). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02035-3_130

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