Safety evaluation of the mixture of chemicals at a specific workplace : theoretical considerations and a suggested two-step procedure
article
Procedures for the selection of compounds with high health hazard potential are reviewed, and major aspects of the assessment of health risks associated with exposure to mixtures of chemicals are discussed. Examples are given of additivity and synergism of effects following exposure to mixtures. Using these data from the literature a two-step procedure for the safety evaluation of the mixture of chemicals occurring at a specific workplace is suggested. The first step consists of estimating the relative health risk associated with each chemical; the estimation is based on the ratio between exposure level and degree of toxicity. Those chemicals representing a high risk are then selected for further consideration. The second step comprises the risk assessment, focusing on prediction of the risk associated with exposure to the mixture of selected chemicals. To allow such prediction the (presumable) mode of action of the selected compounds should be considered. A practical way to find out whether exposure to chemicals at a specific workplace is of serious health concern, could be the conduct of both a 4-week toxicity study in rats and 2 different types of genotoxicity studies with the mixture of selected chemicals, using exposure concentrations related to those occurring in practice.
Chemicals/CAS: Hazardous Substances
Chemicals/CAS: Hazardous Substances
Topics
TNO Identifier
67251
ISSN
03784274
Source
Toxicology Letters, 76(1), pp. 47-55.
Pages
47-55
Files
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