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Firefighters' urinary concentrations of VOC metabolites after controlled-residential and training fire responses.


ABSTRACT:

Introduction

Firefighters are exposed to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) during structural fire responses and training fires, several of which (e.g., benzene, acrolein, styrene) are known or probable carcinogens. Exposure studies have found that firefighters can absorb chemicals like benzene even when self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) are worn, suggesting that dermal absorption contributes to potentially harmful exposures. However, few studies have characterized VOC metabolites in urine from firefighters.

Objectives

We quantified VOC metabolites in firefighters' urine following live firefighting activity across two field studies.

Methods

In two separate controlled field studies, spot urine was collected before and 3 h after firefighters and firefighter students responded to simulated residential and training fires. Urine was also collected from instructors from the training fire study before the first and 3 h after the last training scenario for each day (instructors led three training scenarios per day). Samples were analyzed for metabolites of VOCs to which firefighters may be exposed.

Results

In the residential fire study, urinary metabolites of xylenes (2MHA), toluene (BzMA), and styrene (MADA) increased significantly (at 0.05 level) from pre- to post-fire. In the training fire study, MADA concentrations increased significantly from pre- to post-fire for both firefighter students and instructors. Urinary concentrations of benzene metabolites (MUCA and PhMA) increased significantly from pre- to post-fire for instructors, while metabolites of xylenes (3MHA+4MHA) and acrolein (3HPMA) increased significantly for firefighter students. The two highest MUCA concentrations measured post-shift from instructors exceeded the BEI of 500 μg/g creatinine.

Conclusions

Some of the metabolites that were significantly elevated post-fire are known or probable human carcinogens (benzene, styrene, acrolein); thus, exposure to these compounds should be eliminated or reduced as much as possible through the hierarchy of controls. Given stringent use of SCBA, it appears that dermal exposure contributes in part to the levels measured here.

SUBMITTER: Fent KW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9969558 | biostudies-literature | 2022 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Firefighters' urinary concentrations of VOC metabolites after controlled-residential and training fire responses.

Fent Kenneth W KW   Mayer Alexander C AC   Toennis Christine C   Sammons Deborah D   Robertson Shirley S   Chen I-Chen IC   Bhandari Deepak D   Blount Benjamin C BC   Kerber Steve S   Smith Denise L DL   Horn Gavin P GP  

International journal of hygiene and environmental health 20220411


<h4>Introduction</h4>Firefighters are exposed to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) during structural fire responses and training fires, several of which (e.g., benzene, acrolein, styrene) are known or probable carcinogens. Exposure studies have found that firefighters can absorb chemicals like benzene even when self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) are worn, suggesting that dermal absorption contributes to potentially harmful exposures. However, few studies have characterized VOC metabolites  ...[more]

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