• Title of article

    Psychomotor Effects of Mixed Organic Solvents on Rubber Workers

  • Author/Authors

    Aminian, O tehran university of medical sciences tums - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Occupational Medicine, تهران, ايران , Hashemi, S. tehran university of medical sciences tums - Center for Researchon Occupational Diseases, تهران, ايران , Sadeghniiat-Haghighi, K tehran university of medical sciences tums - Occupational Sleep Research Center, تهران, ايران , Shariatzadeh, A tehran university of medical sciences tums - Ziaeeyan Training Hospital, تهران, ايران , Naseri Esfahani, AH hormozgan university of medical sciences - School of Medicine - Department of Occupational Medicine, ايران

  • From page
    78
  • To page
    83
  • Abstract
    Background: Exposure to organic solvents is common among workers. Objective: To assess neurobehavioral effects of long-term exposure to organic solvents among rubber workers in Tehran, Iran. Methods: Across-sectional study was conducted on 223 employees of a rubber industry. The participants completed a data collection sheet on their occupational and medical history, and demographic characteristics including age, work experience, education level; they performed 6 psychiatric tests on the neurobehavioral core test battery (NCTB) that measure simple reaction time, short-term memory (digit span, Benton), eye-hand coordination (Purdue pegboard, pursuit aiming), and perceptual speed (digit symbol). Results: Workers exposed and not exposed to organic solvents had similar age and education distribution. The mean work experience of the exposed and non-exposed workers was 5.9 and 4.4 years, respectively. The exposed workers had a lower performance compared to non-exposed workers in all psychomotor tests. After controlling for the confounders by logistic regression analysis, it was found that exposure to organic solvents had a significant effect on the results of digit symbols, digit span, Benton, aiming, and simple reaction time tests. No significant effect was observed in pegboard test. Conclusion: Occupational exposure to organic solvent can induce subtle neurobehavioral changes among workers exposed to organic solvents; therefore, periodical evaluation of the central nervous system by objective psychomotor tests is recommended among those who are chronically exposed to organic solvents.
  • Keywords
    Benzene , Toluene , Gasoline , Occupational exposure , Rubber , Neuropsychology
  • Journal title
    The International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (IJOEM)
  • Journal title
    The International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (IJOEM)
  • Record number

    2588653