Litcius/Paper detail

Allergic contact dermatitis to rubber accelerators in protective gloves: Problems, challenges, and solutions for occupational skin protection

Andreas Hansen, Richard Brans, Flora Sonsmann

2021Allergologie select43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Protective gloves are an elementary component of personal protective equipment in many occupations and are intended to protect the hands from various hazards (e.g., wetness, chemicals, mechanical forces, or thermal stress). This is particularly important when other occupational safety measures (e.g., technical-organizational measures) cannot be implemented or are insufficient. However, it is not uncommon for protective gloves themselves to become a problem, as some of their ingredients (e.g., rubber accelerators) can cause allergic reactions. Accelerators in rubber gloves include thiurams, dithiocarbamates, thiazoles, guanidines, and thioureas. If no alternative means of protection are available, this may even result in abandoning the profession. This article is about rubber accelerators, which are often contained in protective gloves made of different rubber materials (e.g., natural rubber (latex) and nitrile rubber) and may cause delayed-type allergies, as well as related challenges, problems, and solutions for occupational skin protection.

Topics & Concepts

Natural rubberPersonal protective equipmentAllergic contact dermatitisOccupational exposureSynthetic rubberAllergyMedicineMaterials scienceMedical emergencyComposite materialImmunologyDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PathologyContact Dermatitis and AllergiesChemical Safety and Risk ManagementPesticide Exposure and Toxicity