THE NEUROEPIDEMIOLOGY OF STYRENE - A CRITICAL-REVIEW OF REPRESENTATIVE LITERATURE

被引:20
|
作者
REBERT, CS [1 ]
HALL, TA [1 ]
机构
[1] SCI INT,ALEXANDRIA,VA
关键词
CHEMICAL EXPOSURE; BOAT BUILDING; DIGIT SYMBOL; ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY; FIBERGLASS; HEARING; INHALATION; NEUROPSYCHOLOGY; REACTION TIME; REVIEW; SOLVENTS; VISION;
D O I
10.3109/10408449409020142
中图分类号
R99 [毒物学(毒理学)];
学科分类号
100405 ;
摘要
Because exposure to styrene occurs commonly in some industries and styrene is highly lipid soluble, it is reasonable to be concerned about the possibility that styrene is neurotoxic. Styrene, like many other solvents, volatile anesthetics, and drugs, does, at certain concentrations, produce acute changes in consciousness with consequent alterations of feelings, cognition, and psychomotor functioning. Such acute actions do not imply that styrene also would produce reversible or irreversible damage to the nervous system; the evaluation of longterm exposures to styrene also is necessary to draw conclusions about the full range of neural effects that styrene might produce. To that end, several studies of workers exposed to styrene for up to 30 years have been undertaken in factories in many parts of the world. Epidemiologists have suggested that neuropsychological deficits such as slowing of reaction time, loss of color vision, and vestibulooculomotor dysfunction are reliably induced by styrene at levels near or below current exposure standards, which range from 20 to 50 ppm in most of the world. However, the workers so studied always were described as healthy, and the effects noted were considered to be subclinical. A detailed evaluation of much of the neuroepidemiological literature on styrene (38 papers and related literature), however, indicated that the findings were, almost universally, false positive outcomes due to (1) type I statistical error, (2) the action of some factor other than styrene, and (3) misinterpretation of data. Despite the study of workers exposed for many years, no indications of persisting damage to the nervous system were evident from this review. The conclusions of this review of the neuroepidemiology of styrene are consistent with those based on critical reviews of the solvent literature in general, with specific reference to the probable absence of such an entity as the ''painter's syndrome'' or ''chronic toxic encephalopathy''. Because the results on styrene neurotoxicity that provide an inclination to lower the current threshold limit values (TLVs) are false positive findings, there is no scientific basis for a reduction in the current TLV.
引用
收藏
页码:S57 / S106
页数:50
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Focal abnormalities in idiopathic generalized epilepsy: A critical review of the literature
    Seneviratne, Udaya
    Cook, Mark
    D'Souza, Wendyl
    EPILEPSIA, 2014, 55 (08) : 1157 - 1169
  • [42] Heart rate variability in insomnia patients: A critical review of the literature
    Dodds, Kirsty L.
    Miller, Christopher B.
    Kyle, Simon D.
    Marshall, Nathaniel S.
    Gordon, Christopher J.
    SLEEP MEDICINE REVIEWS, 2017, 33 : 88 - 100
  • [43] Cyber security training for critical infrastructure protection: A literature review
    Chowdhury, Nabin
    Gkioulos, Vasileios
    COMPUTER SCIENCE REVIEW, 2021, 40
  • [44] A critical literature review of health economic evaluations of rotavirus vaccination
    Aballea, Samuel
    Millier, Aurelie
    Quilici, Sibilia
    Carroll, Stuart
    Petrou, Stavros
    Toumi, Mondher
    HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS, 2013, 9 (06) : 1272 - 1288
  • [45] The role of radiotherapy in bone metastases: A critical review of current literature
    Kougioumtzopoulou, A.
    Zygogianni, A.
    Liakouli, Z.
    Kypraiou, E.
    Kouloulias, V.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE, 2017, 26 (06)
  • [46] A review of the CDM literature: from fine-tuning to critical scrutiny?
    Emma Paulsson
    International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics, 2009, 9 : 63 - 80
  • [47] Critical review of the epidemiology literature on the potential cancer risks of methylene chloride
    Dell, LD
    Mundt, KA
    McDonald, M
    Tritschler, JP
    Mundt, DJ
    INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 1999, 72 (07) : 429 - 442
  • [48] A review of the CDM literature: from fine-tuning to critical scrutiny?
    Paulsson, Emma
    INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS-POLITICS LAW AND ECONOMICS, 2009, 9 (01) : 63 - 80
  • [49] Lung cancer and diesel exhaust: A critical review of the occupational epidemiology literature
    Gamble, John
    CRITICAL REVIEWS IN TOXICOLOGY, 2010, 40 (03) : 189 - 244
  • [50] Private prayer as a suitable intervention for hospitalised patients: a critical review of the literature
    Hollywell, Claire
    Walker, Jan
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2009, 18 (05) : 637 - 651