A cohort of 101 male carbaryl production workers with at least 1 yr experience in the carbaryl area was selected from employment records. Of these individuals, 47 provided satifactory semen samples for analysis; 36 of the 47 provided blood for hormone assay. There were no major age or employment-status differences between those who agreed to participate and those who did not. In the absence of sufficiently detailed industrial hygiene exposure data, a subjective exposure classification was developed. No apparent relationships were found between sperm count and exposure category or years worked in classifications based on carbaryl exposure. Also, no relationship was found between fathering children and exposure to carbaryl. When the sperm-count distribution of the carbaryl-exposed workers was compared with a distribution of sperm counts representing a nonexposed (control) population, no overall differences were observed that could be related to carbaryl exposure. There was a small excess in the number of sperm counts less than 20 million per milliliter among the carbaryl-exposed men, but the excess was not significant at alpha = 0.05.
This study represents the largest series to date documenting the gonadotoxic effect in humans of dibromochloropropane, a widely used pesticide. Three semen analyses, serum hormonal determinations (luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone and testosterone) as well as genital examinations were completed for 228 workers at 2 chemical production sites and consisting of a dibromochloropropane-exposed and non-exposed cohort. Parameteric and non-parametric statistical analyses of the data sets of the sperm densities from the 2 subpopulations demonstrated statistical significance (p less than 0.10) at the short-term (1.5 years) manufacturing plant. Log transformation of the sperm count and hourly exposure data were necessary to develop meaningful statistical conclusions. The serum concentration of follicle-stimulating hormone as a group mean was significantly greater at both production sites for the exposed cohort when compared to the non-exposed participants but decreased by 10 levels of magnitude when the group demonstraing shorter but more recent exposure was compared to those from the plant with longer chemical production. Finally, a dose-response model suggested significant changes in sperm density at the short-term but more recently operated production site when more than 100 adjusted hours of exposure were exceeded, while the longer operated but longer closed facility demonstrated a significant impairment only when more than 1,000 adjusted hours of dibromochloropropane exposure were surpassed. This difference in exposure data may reflect regenerative changes in the tests once the gonadotoxic substance had been removed but exact nature of the dibromochloropropane effect and the possibility of a "no effect" concentration remain to be defined clearly.
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