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ขอขอบคุณล่วงหน้า

โดย:  วิศาล   [12 ต.ค. 2553 12:21]
สามารถหาข้อมูลเพิ่มเติมได้จาก:  เมนูนานาสาระ และหมวด พิษวิทยา  /  สารเคมีในอุตสาหกรรม
ข้อคิดเห็นจากผู้ทรงคุณวุฒิจะแสดงในกรอบสีเขียว ส่วนข้อคิดเห็นหรือความเห็นจากผู้อื่นจะแสดงในกรอบปกติ
ข้อคิดเห็นที่ 1 ของผู้ทรงคุณวุฒิ :1

เอานี่ไปอ่านแล้วกัน ใช้ google แปลก็ได้
คือในขณะนี้ยังพบอันตรายไม่มากเกินไป เว้นแต่
การแพ้ทางผิวหนัง
เคยสงสัยว่ามันน่าจะก่อมะเร็งได้ แต่หลักฐาน
ยังไม่ชัด
SUBSTANCE PROFILES
Glass Wool (Respirable Size)*
Reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen
First Listed in the Seventh Annual Report on Carcinogens (1994)
Carcinogenicity
Glass wool (respirable size) is reasonably anticipated to be a human
carcinogen based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in experimental
animals (IARC 1988). Rats and hamsters receiving glass wool (length of
<3.2 to <7 &#956;m; diameter of <0.18 to <1 &#956;m) by intratracheal instillation
developed adenocarcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, bronchoalveolar
tumors, lung carcinomas, mesotheliomas, and sarcomas. When
administered by intraperitoneal injection (length of <2.4 to <30 &#956;m;
diameter of <0.18 to <1 &#956;m), glass wool-induced mesotheliomas and
sarcomas were observed. In another study in which female rats received
coarse glass wool by intraperitoneal injection, abdominal tumors
(mesotheliomas, sarcomas and, rarely, carcinomas) were induced. In
another study, rats received glass wool, treated with an acid or an alkali,
by intraperitoneal injection. The acid-treated glass wool induced
mesotheliomas, sarcomas and, rarely, carcinomas. Alkali-treated glass
wool also induced the formation of tumors in rats (IARC 1988).
The IARC Working Group on Man-Made Mineral Fibers and
Radon also reviewed five inhalation studies in rats. Although a few
respiratory-tract tumors were observed in these studies, there was no
statistically significant increase in tumor incidence. The IARC Working
Group expressed concerns about the adequacy of many of these studies,
noting factors such as short exposure period, small number of animals,
lack of survival data, and failure to report fiber dimensions. The
National Toxicology Program (NTP) scientific committees reviewed, in
addition to the IARC Working Group’s monograph, a more recent rat
inhalation study (Hesterberg et al. 1993). The authors of this study also
reported no statistically significant increase in lung tumor incidence.
NTP reviewers of this study noted the high tumor incidence in the
control group and expressed concern that the doses administered may
have been too low to elicit a response.
Debate continues in the scientific community regarding the use of
implantation studies as indicators of carcinogenic potential of fibers.
Some investigators maintain that only inhalation exposure is relevant
to the manner in which humans are typically exposed (McClellan et
al. 1992). The IARC Working Group noted that
“Inhalation is the major route of exposure to mineral fibers that have been
shown to cause cancer in humans (e.g., asbestos). Therefore, it is desirable
to use the inhalation route, if possible, when testing such fibers for their
carcinogenicity in animals; however, the qualitative and quantitative
aspects of particle deposition and retention in rodents are considerably
different from those in humans. As a result, particles that may be
important in the induction of disease in humans may never reach the
target tissues in sufficient quantities in rodents. This problem cannot be
overcome by generating higher concentrations of particulate aerosols
because of technical complications, e.g., particle aggregation. The
consequence is that inhalation tests may be less sensitive than tests by
other routes for evaluating the carcinogenicity of particulate and fibrous
materials. In addition, the high cost of and the shortage of adequate
facilities for such studies severely limit the number that can be performed.
It is thus often necessary that other routes of administration be used for
testing the carcinogenic potential of mineral fibers. The methods that have
been most frequently employed are intratracheal instillation and intrapleural
and intraperitoneal administration. With the first, various lung tissues as
well as the pleural mesothelium are the major targets for the administered
test fibers; in the latter two, the pleural and the peritoneal mesothelium,
respectively, are the target tissues. These routes of administration can be
used to test the carcinogenicity of mineral fibers to laboratory animals
because they bring the test fibers into intimate contact with the same target
tissues as in humans” (IARC 1988).
There is inadequate evidence for the carcinogenicity of glass wool in
humans (IARC 1988). A number of studies have been conducted of
workers involved in the production of glass wool. Most of the studies
identified the association of workers exposed to glass wool and lung
cancer. In a Canadian study, there was a statistically significant excess of
lung cancer among glass wool workers; however, there was no
relationship between the length of employment and lung cancer
mortality (IARC 1988). In a U.S. study, Enterline et al. (1987) reported
a small statistically significant excess in all malignant neoplasms and in
respiratory cancer 20 years or more after first employment using local
death rates to estimate expected deaths. In an update of this study,
Marsh et al. (1990) reported that “overall the evidence of a relationship
between exposure to man-made mineral fibers and respiratory cancer
appears to be somewhat weaker than in the previous update”.
Properties
Fibrous glass is the name for a manufactured fiber in which the fiberforming
substance is glass. Silicon dioxide is the primary chemical
component in all glass types; however, many other metal oxides are
present (IARC 1988). These other metal oxides (glass modifiers or
fluxes) and intermediate oxides (stabilizers) alter the composition of
the various glass types and provide the specific chemical and physical
characteristics required by the end-use product. These characteristics
include strength, durability, electrical resistivity, resistance to chemical
attack, and resistance to temperature. Glass wool is resistant to
chemical corrosion by mineral acids.
A fiber is considered to be a particle with a length-to-diameter
aspect ratio of 3 to 1 or greater. Respirable fibers have mass median
aerodynamic diameter approximately 3.5 &#956;m or less. Fibers less than 1
&#956;m in diameter have the highest probability for deposition in the
alveolar regions of the lung, where gas exchange occurs (WHO 1988).
Use
The major uses of glass wool are in thermal, electrical, and acoustical
insulation, weatherproofing, and filtration media. In 1980,
approximately 80% of the glass wool produced for structural
insulation was used in houses. Glass wool, in the form of loose-bagged
wool, is pneumatically blown or hand poured into structural spaces,
such as between joists and in attics. Plumbing and air-handling
systems also require insulation. Glass wool and glass fibers are used to
insulate against heat flow with prefabricated sleeves. Sheet-metal ducts
and plenums of air-handling systems are often insulated with flexible
blankets and semirigid boards usually made of glass fibers. Smalldiameter
glass fibers (0.05 to 3.8 &#956;m) have been used in air and liquid
filtration, and glass fiber air filters have been used in furnaces and air
conditioning systems. Glass fiber filters have been used in the
manufacture of beverages, pharmaceuticals, paper, swimming pool
filters, and many other applications (IARC 1988).
Production
The mineral fiber industry began to grow in the United States and
Europe after World War I and includes products made from rock, clay,
slag, or glass. Glass wool is composed of relatively short cylindrical glass
fibers that are produced by drawing, centrifuging, or blowing molten
glass. Improvements in glass fiber manufacturing technology and new
markets in textiles fueled much of the growth. In the 1950s and 1960s,
glass wool began to replace rock wool and slag wool products used in
thermal insulation. Consequently, the number of rock wool and slag
wool plants in the United States peaked at 80 to 90 in the 1950s. By
1985, there were 58 plants in the United States that produced glass
wool, rock wool, slag wool, or ceramic fibers. The total quantities of
glass wool, rock wool, and slag wool products produced in the United
States were approximately 1.5 million metric tons in 1977 and 1.6
million metric tons in 1982 (IARC 1988). Currently, at least nine
companies supply glass wool products in the United States (Chem
Sources 2001). U.S. imports and exports of glass fiber rovings and glass
REPORT ON CARCINOGENS, ELEVENTH EDITION

โดย:  นพ.พิบูล อิสสระพันธุ์ กรมควบคุมโรค  [15 ต.ค. 2553 09:00](แก้ไขล่าสุด: 15 ต.ค. 2553 09:02)
ข้อคิดเห็นที่ 1:2

ขอบคุณมากครับ ที่กรุณาช่วยตอบ

โดย:  วิศาล  [6 พ.ย. 2553 13:53]
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