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Journal Article

Citation

Henke D, Campbell A, Bradberry SM, Sandilands EA, Thomas SH, Thompson JP, Vale JA. Clin. Toxicol. (Phila) 2017; 55(6): 585-588.

Affiliation

NPIS (Birmingham Unit) , City Hospital , Birmingham , UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15563650.2017.1296154

PMID

28349783

Abstract

CONTEXT: Grout, tile and floor stone sealants contain a solvent, a water-repelling agent and in the case of aerosols a propellant. The water-repelling agent used is typically a fluoropolymer resin, a silicon-based resin, or a combination of both.

OBJECTIVE: To report the clinical course in patients exposed to fluoropolymer-containing sealants referred to the United Kingdom National Poisons Information Service.

METHODS: A retrospective analysis was performed of telephone enquiries received between 2009 and 2015.

RESULTS: 101 enquiries involving 96 exposures were received. The majority of the exposures (n = 88) occurred when the sealant was delivered from an aerosol. Twelve patients were exposed occupationally and the remainder were exposed while using the product at home. Eighty-nine exposures were as a result of inhalation alone, two followed ingestion, three skin contact and one eye contact; one involved inhalation and eye contact. All 90 patients exposed by inhalation developed clinical features: 31 had a World Health Organisation/International Programme on Chemical Safety/European Commission/European Association of Poison Centres and Clinical Toxicologists Poisoning Severity Score of 1 (minor toxicity), 51 patients had features of moderate toxicity (PSS 2) and eight were graded PSS 3 (severe poisoning). The most common features were dyspnea (n = 52; 57.8%; 95% CI = 47.0-68.5), chest pain/tightness (n = 34; 37.8%; 95% CI = 27.2-48.4), coughing (n = 27; 30.0%; 95% CI = 20.0-40.0) and sinus tachycardia (n = 11; 12.2%; 95% CI = 4.1-18.2); hypoxemia was present in 20 (22.2%; 95% CI = 13.1-31.4). At the time of the enquiry a chest X-ray had been performed on 15 patients: in eight patients (all of whom were PSS 3) the X-ray was reported as being abnormal and showed bilateral shadowing.

CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that if fluoropolymer-containing sealants are inhaled then clinical features may occur and in a small proportion (9%) these features may be severe.


Language: en

Keywords

Fluoropolymer; respiratory features; sealants

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