Identifying the sources of mercury exposure in dental workers.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Occupational Medicine-Oxford Pub Date : 2025-01-16 DOI:10.1093/occmed/kqae107
W Chuthong, S Trakulsrichai, P Sirinara
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Abstract

Dental professionals who handle dental amalgam are at risk of mercury exposure, though the prevalence and severity of elevated mercury levels from non-occupational sources are not well characterized. We report two dental workers who had elevated urinary mercury levels (37 and 25.6 mcg/L) during routine health screenings. Their previous mercury tests were normal, and no symptoms or abnormal findings were identified on clinical examination. Mercury exposure in these two workers occurred both occupationally through amalgam contact and non-occupationally via unregulated facial creams and seafood consumption. Their urine mercury levels normalized within 2 months after transitioning to amalgam-free roles and discontinuing the use of the facial products. No chelation or medication was administered in these cases. The identified primary source was inorganic mercury from unregistered facial creams, with levels measuring 18 302.17 and 6221.53 mcg/g surpassing the Thai regulation's maximum limit of zero.

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确定牙科工作者接触汞的来源。
处理牙科汞合金的牙科专业人员有接触汞的风险,但非职业来源汞含量升高的普遍程度和严重程度尚未得到很好的描述。我们报告了两名牙科工作者在常规健康筛查时尿汞水平升高(37和25.6微克/升)。他们以前的汞测试正常,临床检查没有发现任何症状或异常发现。这两名工人的汞暴露既发生在职业上,通过汞合金接触,也发生在非职业上,通过不受管制的面霜和海鲜消费。他们的尿汞水平在过渡到无汞合金角色并停止使用面部产品后2个月内恢复正常。在这些病例中,没有进行螯合或药物治疗。确定的主要来源是未注册面霜中的无机汞,其含量为18 302.17微克/克和6221.53微克/克,超过了泰国规定的最高零限值。
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来源期刊
Occupational Medicine-Oxford
Occupational Medicine-Oxford 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.90%
发文量
120
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Occupational Medicine is an international peer-reviewed journal which provides vital information for the promotion of workplace health and safety. The key strategic aims of the journal are to improve the practice of occupational health professionals through continuing education and to raise the profile of occupational health with key stakeholders including policy makers and representatives of employers and employees. Topics covered include work-related injury and illness, accident and illness prevention, health promotion, occupational disease, health education, the establishment and implementation of health and safety standards, monitoring of the work environment, and the management of recognized hazards. Contributions are welcomed from practising occupational health professionals and research workers in related fields.
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