95 Cllo of the cohort. Potential hazardous workplace exposures varied with department and included nitrosamines, chromate pigments, benzidine-based direct dyestuffs, formaldehyde, leather dust, and aromatic organic solvents. Mortality from all causes combined was lower than expected for each tannery, the standardized mortality ratio being 81 for one and 93 for the other. Deaths from cancer of each site, including the lung, were also lower than expected compared to those of either the population of the United States or of local state rates. A significant excess of deaths was observed, however, due to accidental causes in one tannery and cirrhosis of the liver, suicide, and alcoholism in the other. These excesses did not appear to be causally associated with occupational exposures. Th e findings of this study are consistent with those of the only other mortality investigation of leather tannery employees.
Weanling rats were fed a copper-deficient purified diet. The effects of varying the type of protein and supplements of copper and zinc on cardiovascular pathology and some biochemical parameters were investigated. It was found that cardiomyopathy developed in the copper-deficient groups. Milk powder caused significant exacerbation of this development relative to dietary casein or egg white. Angiopathy developed only when dietary zinc was 20 ppm. Dietary copper did not change this situation. Serum cholesterol was elevated when copper was low and casein or milk powder were the protein source. The data point to an interaction between type of protein and dietary copper or zinc in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular lesions.
An occupational sentinel health event (SHE[O]) is a disease, disability, or untimely death, which is occupationally related and whose occurrence may: 1) provide the impetus for epidemiologic or industrial hygiene studies; or 2) serve as a warning signal that materials substitution, engineering control, personal protection, or medical care may be required. Following survey of scientific literature, a list of 50 disease conditions linked to the workplace was presented in 1983; these were codable within the framework of the International Classification of Diseases system (ICD-9). Three criteria were used for inclusion: documentation of associated agent(s), of involved industries, and of involved occupations. The up-dated list contains 64 diseases or conditions and a bibliography of literature citations. The list is useful for the practicing physician in occupational disease recognition, for occupational morbidity and mortality surveillance, and as a periodically up-dated database of occupationally related diseases.
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