Artigo Revisado por pares

Benzylmercapturic acid is superior to hippuric acid and o-cresol as a urinary marker of occupational exposure to toluene

2003; Elsevier BV; Volume: 147; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.toxlet.2003.11.003

ISSN

1879-3169

Autores

Osamu Inoue, Etsuko Kanno, Kiyoto Kasai, Hirohiko Ukai, Shiki Okamoto, Masayuki Ikeda,

Tópico(s)

Air Quality and Health Impacts

Resumo

The present study was initiated to examine whether urinary benzylmercapturic acid (or N-acetyl-S-benzyl cysteine, BMA), a mercapturate metabolite of toluene, increases in relation to the intensity of toluene exposure, and whether this metabolite is a better marker of occupational exposure to toluene than two traditional markers, hippuric acid and o-cresol. Accordingly, end-of-shift urine samples were collected from 122 printers and 30 office clerks (all men) in the second half of a working week. Solvent (toluene) exposure of the day (8 h) was monitored by means of diffusive sampling. Quantitative relation with toluene showed that BMA had a greater correlation coefficient with toluene (r=0.7) than hippuric acid (r=0.6) or o-cresol (r=0.6). The levels in the urine of the non-exposed control subjects were below the detection limit of 0.2 μg/l for BMA, whereas it was at substantial levels for hippuric acid and o-cresol (239 mg/l and 32 μg/l as a geometric mean, respectively). Thus, BMA, hippuric acid and o-cresol could separate the exposed from the non-exposed when toluene was at <1, 50 and 3 ppm, respectively. Overall, therefore, it appeared reasonable to conclude that BMA is superior to hippuric acid and o-cresol as a marker of occupational exposure to toluene.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX