Arsenic—state of the art
- 11 January 1981
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Industrial Medicine
- Vol. 2 (1) , 5-14
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajim.4700020104
Abstract
Approximately 1.5 million workers in the United States are exposed to arsenic. Occupational exposure is primarily by inhalation. NIOSH recommends that time‐integrated exposure to arsenic in air not exceed 2 μ.g/m3. Recent exposure is accurately measured by urine assay; urine arsenic concentrations above 50 μg/liter indicate increased absorption. Hair assay is a semiquantitative index of past exposure. Toxicity is associated primarily with the trivalent (3 + ) form of arsenic. Acute poisoning is caused most commonly by contaminated food or drink; it is rarely occupational. Chronic intoxication is characterized by dermatitis, hyper‐pigmentation, keratoses, peripheral neuropathy (primarily sensory), irritation of the upper and lower respiratory tract, and occasionally by hepatic toxicity and peripheral vasculopathy (blackfoot disease). Arsenic is not carcinogenic in animal species, but is mutagenic in Syrian hamster cells. In man, arsenic is known definitely to cause cancer of skin, lung, and liver (angiosarcoma) and possibly to cause lymphoma.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Low-level arsenic exposure in wood processing plantsAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1980
- Arsenic excretion by monkeys dosed with arsenic-containing fish or with inorganic arsenicBulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 1978
- Mortality in a region surrounding an arsenic emitting plantEnvironmental Health Perspectives, 1977
- Studies of morbidity near a copper smelter.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1977
- Effects of arsenic on pyruvate dehydrogenase activation.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1977
- Effects of Arsenic on Pyruvate Dehydrogenase ActivationEnvironmental Health Perspectives, 1977
- Studies of Morbidity near a Copper SmelterEnvironmental Health Perspectives, 1977
- Test of Environmental Exposure to Arsenic and Hearing Changes in Exposed ChildrenEnvironmental Health Perspectives, 1977
- Occupational lung cancer among copper smeltersInternational Journal of Cancer, 1974
- The Lead and Arsenic Content of Urines from 46 Persons with No Known Exposure to Lead or ArsenicPublic Health Reports®, 1941