Litcius/Paper detail

Personal inhalable dust and endotoxin exposure among workers in an integrated textile factory

Yifokire Tefera, Vivi Schlünssen, Abera Kumie, Wakgari Deressa, Bente E. Moen, Magne Bråtveit

2020Archives of Environmental & Occupational Health23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine personal exposure to inhalable dust and endotoxin levels among workers in an integrated cotton-processing textile factory and exposure variability across the different work sections. Full shift measurements were carried out using inhalable conical samplers with 37 mm glass-fiber filters. Personal inhalable dust was determined gravimetrically, and endotoxin levels were analyzed by kinetic chromogenic Limulus Amebocytes Lysate assay. The geometric means of personal dust and endotoxin concentrations were 0.75 mg·m−3 and 831 EU·m−3, respectively. The highest dust and endotoxin concentrations were observed in carding section (1.34 mg·m−3 and 6,381 EU·m−3, respectively). Altogether, 11% of dust and 89% of endotoxin samples exceeded workplace exposure limits. This study showed a moderate correlation between inhalable dust and endotoxin (r = 0.450, p < 0.001). Our findings indicate that low dust exposure does not guarantee a low exposure to endotoxin.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental healthFactory (object-oriented programming)TextilePersonal protective equipmentOccupational exposureEnvironmental scienceMedicineGeographyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Computer scienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)Programming languageDiseasePathologyArchaeologyAir Quality and Health ImpactsIndoor Air Quality and Microbial ExposureAir Quality Monitoring and Forecasting