Skip Navigation
Skip to contents

Ann Occup Environ Med : Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

OPEN ACCESS
SEARCH
Search

Articles

Page Path
HOME > Ann Occup Environ Med > Volume 26; 2014 > Article
Case Report High lead exposure in two leaded bronze ingot foundry workers
Yoojun Song, Chunhui Suh, Shin-Ae Kim, Nami Kim, Sung-Min Kim, Seong-Wook Jeong, Se-Yeong Kim, Kun-Hyung Kim, Jeong-Ho Kim, Byung-Chul Son, Chae-Kwan Lee, Jong-Tae Lee
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2014;26:38.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40557-014-0038-8
Published online: December 1, 2014

Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine & Institute of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, Busan Paik Hospital, Inje University, 75, Bokji-ro, Busanjin-gu, Busan, 633-165 Republic of Korea JFIFddDuckydqhttp://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/ Adobed     ! 1AQa"q 2#w8B36v7XRr$9bCt%u&Ws'(xy4T5fH  !1AQaq"2B Rbr#u67Ѳ3sTt5v8Sc$4ĂCÔ%UӅFV ?_Aנj- H>>,m*>fzp"TrKkr^r.|_&]|*vPuܶvoQ1mwVJUhu-I"=LniAƕ8"۲ k*ҿ[yu:.vUQ+)%F DHyVBk>Hy8jݹ q~9D4KRmzQ)^ʔ.J%k_tVi5NTjg!'ky|5asOȻ)R۸ߩFMԿ3L4j6dڜ#NIwUF]JqB/(FafJRzq3\G՛ ?~\ 6)6W4m[O^L0E&rRMض*C .]Unl-1 1r#Rj/&QɈ׉˩s6Rj=5Tg.y.·Pӡ:JJS:C8-2u]d&vUz;7p9 5VnL֢"y)">iי(IDDd| Yj0; LRfS:ktYK%*N2^m|&dğth":ey)uPQZW)gcC3Pv&MMWd&Ŵ۲mvTRoժM03*F3Yd6\8,\hݻ kߔi<k NTwSԪmljj[>->ptU%'LR>&EBH$MQAUx[$Z6vi&_a.KIQ{hyƒ j"JOC9eFҝfj;˚Ω<[3_m% lQ@4g=5$(J]Yc-OMq<Ǎ wSzڗ)k$7VIP붾ͯnV+卵*t]iЎD31~SA1éC2u)ʼnQn-Uoi3:grI8ؓWm*G zܕ)ZקJ}Y YlGeJ6cB2I NS3Q>k=KTBT]W6+SOXQgGR? telˊ%-Re\hѯ2TF"C/OJΩ6r[N.0{SpljjX1“jOsӥ;ҭhe}xu`Ք&.)yO̒ Fߑ.$Qw;9Iw2o+RVJMSOj[SoҌZ%;`d$blQ{Ro{Imڌ>3egf\O֝Uzx"䢸g+mv%Gʆ:|V[N'&ס-ޝ'kfE|K,G&˳98Juin/\\Qݿ̋v~Ǩ!rtWU d|E߫R4d}.qPw*Ӭv5YEcn~f5c%MTMkb-F>5JT,})QHg%{("ӔȸWMsYyWNRrkkJr0XドnͫT}r-jj,Ŕʍ\Q2Ri>v$5!]"JB2WɅ)]VԜUc8i|.jeRO6^V.¸ Q&#|ܶ-*uOG%JAtRZRr]FFG\۩w+?'zչSѧt jz>KW&ot{7P&2D;&\\>Q2JzܗAKSfeNn[jRrԕf6,q,F1tRfԗ>vֶևj-&R'Zi2=xv~Elbsvm8=ӛ"ū񕜈BȩlWau[]ٷBߨF~J!|Ipr3R̴#Yp)={7:G{+:\W}n|Q#%)7^-h"Ƒq:M*%J&$T軨I333׎g_- ucBwwjp[6i25$̏bU’ٱRv?G\~#Iͪb7<<}Ezt" q_Inw,7-d,G÷%T* Wg1"䥱kq/A.,_KhqŒxwvo u2ۥۧ.bQ}XκA$֣ +K״ZUNmڸII{.v{5z5ѮRme[moyƾd~cRݾK'j.\i&/S6f|b=5: p!6i_ 4j6=.si˧eƾtS^c.Y^RJVS-Vi3,esi08?H$GvZgg?gi䤟2adw릿:"۪lkSN>q-4kI܋ێe̊qۅgDoѨ9; #T.Q;7#~_Ufstb_'w~Xw1Xk,vcOt._}v}8"(4Z\ۘgk?J?bm_c!g{HZV]Fkk%~gEt)b秴vΰB|꽸}mp~E6ݹv;7P٤v+ri*3Ԣ|'O14_~7nP{7ZU\Vű[ +7󖱅o#:ǥŬ\|3r%TJX]V7ez¨Y]lc|O3V! R zbJ'PnGqVJ"19WVeOF埜EaEJωqCN5Z g-9[S<$sUK5b|7sn\7x qmv##FF\ w[=-43$^ooVSiXօv7iB۴yg>]Vf"r$J3""32!Zh[K%7GvNLs+4nB/B{vlsobJaҺJR:0g%&zR\ S3T[&ִor*ⷳc3ʊO[iozW٨%$gn:ܶWwFBԹjHP&z u&F2\f;ipW73 [; '_̽b;vib!oec dC-tS__$Xs]l9&z$2/N>%'[}b{h/{`{Ji׉׏ YJB/X%}.|+{(S:qz]4_Kѵo`^tY_4S#* ^zvݾMr+TrkQ g.8Ͽ^i>ӈǙvix>$o( ^qt*&t1oJVu-ql5U6jCЉmĻ*"?JT=K'O/|=Vo}l0b}}f?X[?/\JSBe,kP8ETJ==?.p5ފgbU9}ǶdNKk—_$8̸͓ۍ8Di\BԿ-1v{FF]|.^ۅ{vl12׏z7-R7wE?\nh\jN/Kձr_oBw"N QMBZqe-m:ӨSn6j4%!hQ;sv'm4kcM=!8\m[M4{SMliۇ%eֽR&N:{2A8)THLK3Zj[jPBx#BگMf:G1\`edcʮ?|w(-̮vXt,bW2;.ιNHRR#YwTM"<;mk\.foIDjmlJ;vxy7o7i\,KQŊ9d^Mmgc L*.T6tLeIuOH3SJQ3=F/ʿ<9\JM6mN6=<{xkP!F1QR[I$6ُimXu2An2yԒMU q f[IB-'䤯jYm52&JG\zд\~vdg QtHGXw&1Lw+nDEdC1w|YJmvP)HZ>i0BPβә?R:QO["]I_Jʏۍ>QKyu^bycBq4lXF~l [\*N>-J6,Gq(Zr5h]CwYӤU~ʶߑ u*SIv%ZfJ7)! FS*s_\|IŸZ)J ]ܜi4"z[+Z,MOZ))}|Ʀ(RUNIII.S'ˍO~˨rn}M)xxӕ0 eyҵ7YMAB]ӣU:/ѭ*6bcwP͵ "+qēVjŹO|GtY4V j[mLV M -m>",B$ GD1~j6O4|LxnNmqATNR3ε|DŽa[fmn-ڭ+FiK7Pcm;r5 l8r{#-]'nrFh2ruycb;pW=njRqRJ(d mnpckNnʹ+6]tz~E=ʕ l ZZ5jSi3#47.Lcfe`9؏v囜.F\-UZ:*0_<Νu9Lӵm&)_3\^ҹ3"1n1v_|uRʞͫr'iȧN_kH׺8xXrj=\МH)V\ˬ.Xʸ oVRC}ySU9/OBY먌5 ٿwޞ)rw8Ӫi5*5ZΗcGƱ !ZۄlmpjJ -l <R̵/JAպZuq\IdUS 48wXJJtcg4cI~aqߓwŷrm-v)G7yS^7H^-\mŌAq|"m9IBnF㏉9[N+mmy/!KKۉ%n +BdddfFF6FQRN-U5;Sv'm4kcM=Mn)\qιqUd9F%",6MGdT%-+~ f%+y֛^3SrF>6lc(֪vۊN;g._0Sѧ]ETWرkQKzGe9ʨsKA"yC y2\[5 rԭ7Gk5Mzw_4sM3hxЊ'oÍ5jsub )ͪ~tR2H]R͍>̋m6=%(˿(Wrr-܅y5(ܔJ޺YunW̹븹NsqK ]/QR#"ZMDfD|43Qw|._ԡSqTZBg??O Ϥ)/E_U|i}2 9Z?¹0:x'3,whǣ?C y-A~=daJј&M?D1_PS+Oi&;a @;Dž7[ zZC"bv:jjMQk$M RԸ3uA\=wI.AwC"^.{?-\NSiˏ"b}T/}q/ o.1M}R%:-ZniʒL$SgrBW*,Mw'N\ɇ{s\j]VryG'8f`}'N<*/`U숻z CwHq18J+vԕKss4R53/&XTt1bZƟo\=%nO)h$rBi-nKĪ^ ջڜlwkYm[̑+/QrZo%TQ;TLs($2C:s.%+eoNttq۰kK7O0m_t_pZ1SsSM7"mevFZ[w -FJ*T*jФQRg BSu|]g:ɵzjqwmltL.e3sRMچkSmjkmWœިm++¦'tILk*բQ D,PB\lI[9{%Gb R6öۍmX-MaʉA931cs..G4CujQտ[9 }G-xwl)IQz j Ó"rqe&=]꾧֎c)<kӳ+0JrRR3'TnXi^xMF Bު*tIL.[h"2"nKzZe'ZV/RrNYz]8죝n]Ķܩ>^Ժ]u-7^\mZjܣ9+Rmn ߑv?oꋘ?&ƪy^N4o=3-ؔ̿*`}V݁ ƒPu8%$ ݗ]wt;\y\>='OjPIp/nJU8{϶FNMsf"ίNqƹ(+ ݮF2Km |jܴZs%zf*eȫ?]4)I۵nR&FX + [jDh(#哑9q9Eծj8noǕZf\J-l&Z˫}`ӎhyrΉn\űn]9pʌӣ"׮Wt?N4_I_~54#/my1Xr*척aS#DT >q ssΛW;3oUaJSRMDgQnt:Ql,/ ܷfRqiM Ȼ>Cob;A>ڦWقM9X~/!'MW.}Vrߔꔵ!5|iB(0-zF=}okڢE$^wW~nokY߮\6՜̌{i-AF*9)\t9IV6۸5ZUF6R$ŨQIq砳YUZ]eyv >hI櫥N )&l JulwE1GDOuFN2| }馥uC1rޫV+^gdb&W[4<^e4YW,d|htͮsUM)۸8:{3d{AѢ)~ \#J=NdƮꮓ90 |1K$v*?мS ]i$J,C,SG?/_՜pMSƯM|mG1V1$~K>CSvkuj=&) -,yLjuFHK{c駗.SOua;BrSqj-ۍZ#'Jys7[g2z/.u4+XV2VQ.ޕ)$"(%)#Z7suZ%j }BǬݕe)Jvz8zJf:hIN|svO1O#IEcۍjݽ:SdὮvu^@:o^5cs>i/VqmVm]ؔܢn6'vޑ̗J4Wn@OlKbX ;n:hgJ9ŻyǑz8f܌q&Y fN0N;[69 rbׅC2/#kE l&2~èMR.*%g=Ft.%؝e8<.e=Uv{~㻏"EˑnvDѭ͜Lu3u0:U֝$[M5<:oi+V4V9 6nXvx&_ q Qqw3W:uϔ2yb/(ɳ|5zQiJ#r|Hw#.W?4aDŲ\ugWG;Cw鐢K|xg)##=O.dF˟jMUvWĻsr.z]kPc9"]R)mkfOd*uYf١RsB Aîh=k]ʳUrrZsq`d#r$/Ը3o^&lRWȍyuW̦Y4QDUMJ65ƒ[+ygk XK_±k#y:8(TJOSQhJt2.DR}"5[) r)6V6u5k:eXZmv𭤔!푊Q[qQ}ҹLE- 8qIZG|UM4j}Mܕ[Vwm{} Naqµ"ԈM zOpKѰ?IAD3Ir0'/q1itoB5{%wkOBn-ۜduqIzYK60{+DʕܞqIt";r1mG/\/ym[6JƫR \L=S=OT@Ix[TMm{>ݾտ֒ݸӉLYIx>+"JVNzx||5rI?C{oz8۹e\R-^\A2F R+N9 vlT]"ۭ d)t֞i #E2jB@׵=#/N+!ĕhx}I!cM`ąZ*ŻɄҒ߮Y.Z}='/oۙ3IpW̮hT7cTSuz9>B}΄&h!>lӵn~j˅IvU.'v'CSZw8QK3G> ,J59ٷ+HSg䧎hJdzvwv-cvxS5[̊n~ؿ%ַX?O0\6ne 6kn9.ϯ} *h 8_QhLݣ7q +=XBҲ5?[[)+F`=4 }B,sNg==u*Nj9k_GJ)+R~GSPBȒZ:(K]heL=vKPӢwq(NrG^ثϣ?#tC?.ͼ[ۅo؞y#%ǛjVyLSw%T*s92JTM%"YkQО.q)gCͲn8cgi6j1MѾ[{9h^vƘǚםidfi.^RHmg&rׇz:}݃}xT$ضk'5s-狶,\vpbPD،=Okf.c#cdz2FK5T!&)|ntD<+OŹU i-G[EE*FDfeaf2QƤM\UG_{ǹm%\yrGy:.\4wjPGUJޕUV7Do\7Vy_13w;[?c]H\$IJ,*L]3b%L{y.JRKG2sq,B6T}(#nW|km+q5] r㪍bJ@y{byz,b踊3ϻJ,'^xd،)JVw#.Vټc''ÝպWtbRؒJz۠8!o9IۄS95E9ؔ-e9JR{dmnッ<[~n${~Њ$W?&ՐY_? #a.ߑv?oꋘ?&ơ|y^N4o=3t=~7!/M3>n8W홎2M`Qx+ z qy8%]7_~540ۦ彷]Wq CѡwkďyF5Dum_}~P(5.(X,K9vᯐ?leB9;Jhm#3{CxGE-S{;@Fz˙]=O'!ɿ]' r`:7'2bЖ>Iy,/eTy/V<.H?UYY{\^#ѣr9^7?xoRȆ7EoS_&??zϾM?(~Q-K&>"~aߨ t7Emsϛ+?;fCr)fY+>z$tIkjn_>vnrֳki-˹l= t;'EyC¥|/BLwBJdgjۛ$s S1|ɍV%JI6KvəhzIlBYɒ|0"Sy0F>eo5W)O+X˻u';v)2vVq۳kۮws?UʑBǴYO漪e2MIjPAک\b1)DDؚKm6ZWΨgȕ۶yjڳ 2ضN[C[|r@9Jfo<_eI7q.|cÊV߷:i.:$ȋ)1%%)ADZCEBxJ0MJۥy(bNsKM9k43IwNt.\%N簤I'.j|ƃ2$grBEٌ\}9:v*!n7M(ɽ]7c@XxƱԨ37īf62cTTfFK]9wntQHͮvٱI/f|j=7}\_V5U^+:uljSȃY(XI.ȱmo1甅jڎIZ2>#\*:gY|4k\8ZwSqtyA!+];бޞKծË¥e)#5ap.QK^8VdU{*ѽL\=qmjnB5>{ Ӟ`v±5 ^k&O~Oshɷ,;6nOW>u6{RqS`)S%jp\ipdEBLfTWy$GIYw~䲭J.1vSY5z.V>^+Ǎvc.I[R{QsNR3ӎfhd>y?UJ*}~[e\i5U^͛E]G_FS(Iɿ]i8:4zj~շsW,ˆsy:%O}iur]iF5~3M:Ӟ#N06)4ߧgdawIotiz:1r5YDZLHBSi;NQc44la=Y kQIT*ըl:tq2(է9VO4뒳܂~2rq'nrVZŦ[t7\oլfb/mlpc.I8콚q^1iE~䰳mi[dۧw֤ICfdFeCsg:i| 6擣׋* 96lust^{%99UNRvaMܽo ammi$em4D6DD\nA%$$#}۷/ݕr99JMն[oT޲E"KTaP+HGkŴj5TM5xƱOS-k`ۛkٝWz;{kS}F;~q|~^_|euwnE'pSupUP)V]vE+t =ZRaVdG6= *.ϼnj9:UɷbېmF_tޫgHjVS'śǕًdkkѻ_]Kv?nT>)^e=Ar1'3ԔILyD?:-^in):{7.؂\.:V }#뺾.3r̸*xbFM aȵz 6SQ:ײj[ 8nn iFMw rR"5M5I旘35f^j='j:nNW.ʭocZvZKV^ɚJ.cM1ZI7E'6rg탸5oZ=[m Z`\hbMUR١Ȗĉ):Jin!_7Dй+f̷eKҷvͨBPR(V`y6tw*MRΝcB.ڭTnc;P$8nFvm4(D(R#R-L -2:FP lxZKQc6I("Km%$E, 78uXIFA$RQI$JbInG]c[ֹ:ZM+n^')JmJMJRu{e)7jQDw~%yQl}BZujSSf۩QZ+Dzhd5o%BIc'GZ?}΍:>Ɵivז-%݌J5MqGWTVʦh݇ܟ~Օ_6 n'{3~mϬj'J11OȻn߃r Qr\3y٘+WӍ'WxEs^O3 o~[|7>]]H9݇ZomT@]?5B:Z߂'`V_+/MSKX߆ޠk3?o7y:4R/7þ] iG߬aBRU&?r&/} cQߥGj2?C5Yśe7hU=?+ x龳f-܈czW^7p%-(\D4h{UK&ӡn^m]Fݢ:`δvj俜F+) y[{{ 7 tu>gvrěOj'5 iRg[ͶFjGe n~qT$ci ۚ0oԹc*jL[sVWqj\ݻ&6"WoK:cnWmrv)o>66(F>=W^bf#c zzʞtپy%mՉPël e}J.\Zk4ttt>oEM=q)hJjI=ͥ(%]脼_88ф;͛gWG;Cw~˘$4=uWdĜTثNDkiQL9U*O"4XP`02,Ge-k5$h>ܼ]3vr6!9RQPIVSnM(ۓ{>;/Qͱv{3&-[rc)ܚI$n{Sv3[j00)-D3z}MRzVQпj,T[uVs0\}Sid;r(ݝJ>æʺL&c[jPK0~d(FKÝW\m]GTcF|Iׁ)I3~#oX%vҦEݑؼ5Żv2qAZTE^..M{ʐfȏ2##.R}*KʛZz^ӞN*lPťLf\G6[WVQquV]XAi)5J!,$iJ6o$tPZc;Kjx_n3`qIelV~vLy{fn匋Ѿn%;zV.n'-ұdd2߽1bZksPe3TI9)$ԩIN9Vơ\=2885N\ p)/a柛w9g_lױo8ݷ iixJV& ғRi{N^_oAŮE6Y7I$Nk$|Q)-*4Z)^¸%4Qm [I%.c-OV+C֧R#%ѨCe3i;w$G+_dy| Fzj$DI(=OA gj%v/]8qԯNIS*֩',Q%\44ZZ%D|Ǧʴ6&vֵI$%8(ԬƾS&#Z. }6z?b/|Jl{ץv&mpx4Z$”ڝ4-H%dGKfM:sKSRWeJAn]>s6应-W9'H]'uȫYvgK^\czp|My\鏩w/ËQ.)]\QiS`8uL뚛̸=J"ܻi\å'-)54Ue]:K\퓡vK xwBqrH\*֕TnzC.mT=t-H]SČ~Nu╏NÅ3f|͡G~B+Xm[Q7U{9"~jgK Zoʰ7"qJ,ekSeNGgϳ] ^.6:s}_,%eRg<5⿨z{ZPun#jRІ.6g T.!]xa c#jN$Zpl̋H WZu8WmMRýsĮ?Mco~sx TU҆Q :KDG4n42.<3/'^?6/ܠڒ^yrrÿr2\D}}B]^E~^T cɛ7϶Y[<֞[7d}2%QPqOLEQR\CIsj1?\}%tJ0e~ *sk"*)&ۓEi#{1J8Hrt|'ܝRr8)=ƔN'RVz:cf]F7bZyZUȘ4x8,#JG̒?.W9XnO]KO]%]ƻ O5Γ/3qÓj؍/r̺rƵ 5\&m6h.xoeX[=<3%< lZ"2h\Z[&jW3ejm?k&[]ųj+{N{66leu_+lj]q* 7g*knأYv= q ەdxЬZ|%GUrQ3jLŒqET]1% qkXYūYc[7Ś]QY\jko\</Lc7+'hMSUc6qXyؙ~6#ѯv.0$BQi5YyIhɍiy=KD!n3Vm[V%W-B%swa97ajۗ m+9~]fKq|Ddaˑ0A]_v޺mM5* F-BYHJ5}q>ʉ.6hyDmpD׬'-_v5;5[8K[viJ.3dR:oYHHh9I7:۽fi+wm^ [)odPѱ52CZUJicSw\&_s0uBȍh32džzQflcd^m|7GѹE!fO5]]H9݇ZomT@]?5B:Z߂'`V_+/MSKX߆ޠk3?o7y:4R/7þ] iG߬aBRU&?r&/} cQߥGj2?C5Yśe7hU=?+ x龳f-܈czW^7p%5|Y:SJE\U-(a_cƣUǽXXKiȞNlmۊڭڄR!**ܤMeȽ$|X5(Ź\rJ~ܮ]>'HB0cp XFr_c?f?7<ukSgov¥iG>>䙗i.+t+bOjIܶ . i^:nm}s}(3>NZ$2Qg([".>i.ƾ)B̋M8+"- >eE6DݥJnJˣt׻ 5.˅nJGwZD~!i۶a,Db3ZQ3O#KO5/֍ozuK'GbRi᝘NV_ҝcvם ZoX}F6z 7e5_e:ۓj=AB+iܔERadMBq*ԯ DwI/Gy*mĥiRKg6skY/#SN4e$-yXM YL?^ĸNNӪ{$r1JJRSLO]Aqm>V/s[~i/j+m>z}eI"Qvp]{ZԼ:{vPAG2=T͡@ڐ#u"E*>C;o$~C#_d/HBq^YRٽzIKbOm\~żjFFGdiQ(*/i*#.FF]©m=BmpQQQSP&Ҫ!T&^>:y)$ˑÐFčI Bӡ-t!bM WҦŶ'UZ=}zvn~oT/\ǒ'nr8 AJIӆz<^uߖ4eFC1i+v!3qNyߕni?4JZlmYFXFۼO0B\m[ tʄU3s"Sr(NJ;SKW72L4̏BVdf^Ҹj\]ȱ۪(ӷm?J-KEmWڽ^4<8qu%9pŹW~877ܾeVгS(յe^C]yX͹! םm4FGȋ\y'Z FX7e)|Gjt߹#gb\ŧq_([R8[qU$Z (ʻezV2V!iQ,i$JE˂٩ a(GK'O{vnBvryRd-RK4=qxZJMl_CuuIz @Rt㮽޳!|68\-l[џ84-2Pu" RJ_^OL>G1~XnBŬw6J0*Uvlږ1N G1q9IUm*'oWu][&UyYZbBZRZNfEJf"+2nF~Eû7n1xv.RUM$6 lAxSQJ&n5ܞwlEói"#>4׿Q.nEq7Oko[1wg8ZQwZYiqtm&~">Bo?w͡ni2峋NCEy Ҕ+%ZJ ʩq*fpˤl,~^Mχk1+:ݕ z&Y`KLӪУDr3[*Z :(SL&ݻ۬Vqsyԭs x|iI߽zZrg.:mp%6ԜvgmpIUt;QbS.Է) ǨKSV,*lڌ|5Jt3#NP.=+OZ~/G سIgbꥹJnl_DUM\iM!֔wVZuԺ,yV.Q>f v:݇WiaŸN5Ҕ[M7SsrvǣrMW= \8ZW-jsnڕ.ZnF2qt ً[ٻޘY۷Zm"Jxr&NAfA-݌to9s359݆mZ+N1-qS$D=17 x׵+%_ ve4ir6Z$FDڗnFtOr'7'{9C˨ꤡaYoace{Refnft RR"4%ʌm:Sj3)OdInTO>X'vxV#jܮw9Fog;5.~Y5\~18YQܹvj4+~t7S ﬕs %^۵ڴDZV69R^Y+rj$ԇoJKR5wB9C>Y:l+EǎS{ʲ{T6Wi* ^^9k/y/Cs\g*qڵgn4T8mERr|Ti+iPe;;.i\EBEJ 丬i9ɧM-ԼsGDrZ>r#R>~X9y4b棇9JwV۔%m(b[Tjvl}۩~nDԺ{Zo-YuK1vx.nWuO+jN [ٮ0%"΢CdTJK-RަH"$I(*ve &҉FzB,_Vpqp9m8werv')E;o&QE׵^d9˦j\_,ڵugZȻ̧8k+jK{wmr@3ӭ2 wFkzFVqs1؛.v'I%$[iT]D5Dl2 nk7qUxԫLS+sا3/ΖeZYK<["%-g/kRs:f3;*E ت wJ%)5&+&rw*霣i|sMҴ|;R+fm䡩.!**dӶ-6s6,]zAXMWjmnz%SJߴm2UXw7MQ%<!tKys#P,W>s;3IYwx<+i_\\\U6 u7P|xbn_k&ӓVOe䦒 VUr,-㘘"-LZeOSҠթrEvq8Kf%5%&K"#%vD/.ZYYŏ+p$nZkvއuW9㓱Z G wYIFyf)?ƎUm5ԉ/'k84{KO:rQI}XRuԪ|*lu)3qZ[mSm5R3".Xcَ5c®ࢫI*۳~wRϿQWޝ(EJrri&ۥ^ʶ齲Im|[yb;mnm֩uiܘq>E+Ikx߄3r33-5𹻖09ϖ9[Tz~mr5NsWl$oPusޛ^{Z;);sڹf\3oٹZmԉ/'k84{NO:rQIBø8Bݱ3n֤DiK4u& ofSȒܩx<˘|N0Fչ]qsp"}! QWw@t4ӭ+cO5%]'*{eM߲DRO1y*q8w++e!c߶ܪlZWّM欼 CQ̼빶lX{vib/V/ ai;x6~]+z]MWB>re-:lgk}պ!#9?%܋V-c[z!W?c7YNm/jRr[HOzԻefճ0q15Zp#rkQQ0tU-AmڵP/cȕ?0cZYj;:0ZM=D6g ?'UN+ձ[K ܖB2'xq9{|۫N0ku 7xaj;n\ 2[VznMlWiKbSk))f..)Km)&bGZ=>OR܍W:j'rM'wYz&/鶧{Sʵb"vջq[I-ՌZH._x*BagC'T(Q:$ͳQcMCKy?3g'ߝqnT);qs #ؤZ}OOI:cfnc8W~qy.;^pVl]Hԓ>^H^@7-AA܃nmL(uWܻS߿ Td95Bdh4t6*dDh!EhI[iŨ\L.&Nc ܮf^;$R)\rip9I|ٺ?#R.ZDZ;/]nݻqs\QE9M&Bd ]N mN*D>tgbK>+ˏ.!23]BȔR1ɝ^j'k2ƮqBQq[$di]icV/e`޵B.FIIJqbi>Ӥ|p; 6${)RU>_e}^dzdfzi %ekRVUS?6'hׂ)5.\+qUgzE2C˷ecŏ^֔ibk shesFWJ#~> Wk~ݨ}ڶ>ơǚ)׽ZƉo~B-ڼrvoE:Ʃ3ۣK7+Y`WirS):{>ڛ}:wԨ(J_";6R%[u&ƫdZ_\'np| RJwNeTW,=rrbnkڄ[M3ܴz)3- R.?:okۼ0TU'w{6&w7j1z3ON'fGoO?)S_bQ_¿R(^ԴԴG.EtMڇ&RUiW uQjU> Kiu1d<ѥIQ'RQ1:O/lŗᏩiʂv&Jc{D5 Tt)1.n[n۶X}RjqnOʽ(~[Ns{ސ⛌uO,kgo֢dRNQȄ .'6W!׌P朼tdZjFGE"]K@'i۪N;sI[{SOzk>`rRR+!σj8&TjlvA̷Q?HyjyLHNտJMjܶT۽lG?SnKN%<‘ nq[N0Sq[Ta(&t(|HGO~gvkݻTR4&Z$#ViOY1r$6YF?e4U/Mvxų:zbU^gQQ+NW_'4jfz^c'#`rvrڡ(IJ/J ݦ6 ]-CW |_{v*_q3^DZ}Ic6Uڌ8p7{crZq5ki`)mU6|-Z5^iEz3P=:Cu7DF'k%}<C-޹ֲ̱#\,(f88%X-N(ck0VLR~} G"-8ӏ/ϰKq?(#nrVTmZ;zióM4 m |UT'C^_1X.gXM{%ʤd 4\ovN":"y-,T)fLQgۢr=/CƹǨJVr[a+!rT|%Y\ٱzsS>jͱ.oOc6f$q% ǒGo;n[];ߎjrk{~\VۓNIGn:iqxo |~t5)Rxעri{Vi&NUOl_ѮMfsޕkЄay.0P{7N((BaIP$ K"U6Gl ݙqJRu+qN$ m#*p<|{:>-Ev=86N*MM긭U*uѾ?/^o7;'u,h4݌xښRM:5.(/ \իU.{F^rmF-Jɷ.>Q"[4xT^OZ~mK}T0ݛ^SAo9u?lX(' qj%=X}"^e4wˠ|rܫ 6I\Ķ;Ӻw!'ڍWg{ i U_9Avhۣƾ+:vs/MK[ɭīe{`Zgb}r[i'GE2J7Nez579wRq+Un ]J.cJ4M:h箽Wxxm^ pc\wcN%'My $$| :$Fqɏ¾^қP9J6Wxvu}ݵP>Z'FFdg"-; [¢cmWkÎT8nG%ݣ7*\խCLRYZͤiD&J#'ehbSyXK|y*ӞpS̍R`[pTr/Eg)K+92{_ n3zwz'oŸۤ+sOj J:`T>Cf*lwd\fYOP"R E֢̔L4ɥ :;.b(B02rJ蠟9>V'9M%)IqnhP<%,r'P/vNSwr#w"ݨaqc(|{kd=^0jTMR2ULNz|.<|^PfY22##!,K~E BEJۜ&jRNsHަޛg\r,v؜.jK3)[EJ2ii{KEiHP^&]Gn8x=K}Wx/KI9-ϵwQ%spܾ[^R}S3$qvq8M[ ozKxcqmJ/ӿ{_}7&ݨ\f6ZSyQz& 7ۉ[8~UNn|nkiTB+4RI8'Nc%tn{!]Ȋo.nEmʱn𵵥J A+wy#+ikǒڂ;՛s85'KmE:Ђu""Iģ5p=БbTY-ͽڔ詻ngL2Q}$de# fs^o{DUUsfwӶ;s1T,ǤtޒQ\෼J=.tKU,7čJ5 N$y3kdSMQU~mO[03 $zAڟsF5^뜞"Կ QHmrR"ӳηer+ҔZ]hE-6Jmt'ޒ=O[sQj)6K}?e4v_KfZheޓ=BV[bY}lݒTTЬ{ȫvO_qpRApVŗ 6ju=*BR)g "O1yhb=tqJ gtm\b3RY+JQ^Ō֍\յ\>+uSi{=x ^w;uӘ#ĸzLn*$anok߷CBӷ}5Yqvdž<( "_OWit5:EZj2 B ρ1̊fi[n!HQF82q1牙nqnEpT(2RMoM4ϳOu ':֧_Xjsg jP^(ڙ{2%E͖j^}ZU[Q$'U) <܂%!s"m R'G5M0<+zM6qYm$ڕ$3ǧH]?o2N<8F1̻r_my[Rf59NjpzBnl7*{.QP 3N&^BLJPjAHCK2Q}$#~YMq8 k(MFMU)8MEqTy+Tʞ-ar5yܕOXw!e;q-Jqܶ䓊Y:LC UE{/t>r"lI9)3KJjϤA 6SEE$d߇3KG*En|P\ԭTn6I-ƍKTj<1H_zwGr19wF N8ݝ+a9ɫM6mhePi%mmD! """"""*1bRKrD"vnrM۫mmĽm]ӡiG~e"˩ lhRTMk^MX["Jݱk7_ޕ*DqĒ&flՒ}`W}~SմZ{ĕ~wm*/{{ѹ_-0ط#P]xlڱ~Tn5wi*lڪ (JxioϏbqKYR|!|KN53 OS222$jzww%i}>N)E+rۥ7c$Ofl/LNث\6H9: FY󡈾I)fB֔JI_ ֣^: 9mY{66㒢7Uj]:.-os[R&gMF3˸#໹kmjq^8W"PΦURjʄWa˧T!͋ lW48JB2ko+ /Nw QwQzQ ے%$ޓ7^YL|r7!v%Trܥ &|M8~ybrn[RV gSn{{*#2#ԽᢏӴHak" ӌcwҜw&RJ07ױ>Ļ =^ BɆ)v32.M1=#6%̠tҤnzqMwԣ~s*%-j|_m*.Yx9Sz=)qE4 3pk+,`=kNRڥ=B=nŔNAx)Q$ԩȧ4z3t#Z2lҮYn$S%y- JzGpu|LBV7ZW#;Wwipܷ%(6jFG5#{$D"uۭ~]֫SrD܃fҎӾ+Tu>-ZTQ& N|$沸ii>eRWݳu'[O̻j8JۻEѩ[]vni= ڒ,[_%kC7I3Nv$4ɎЈeٸoUu:[}Do5|zNq=Tre%ɧ6&~DȍF]ƞG5q m]/w/ \ʲr8=oʔe9U(W"|S]uZd#?Se[W"ֿh][-7Nu:T=)R}.;ml*5Dlf $fF(̏T hiIUU4Szɕ t(%_|2 ~6eM;TƗK[f&]LK^CE2[ȏBOd;Mi|cx,^6;sیGpQ\NuJIFTJ~đArh* B"$H쉩eXPRj?sl"ԥ)su]xpԴY%VESH"ЋJǰ K&5^Ukzׄ8kEgS2h&Se\ Yl]WҶp-ZUvi7QS:4byqOo+[̺腋[6-_Fo.6[7$p&^ _GZԸߍkc.qqoI[9m߸YxOZЦ1uoiSH)P9Uʄjcq= S>֙NeR><;+ڌk%_qT].srNO?s[=vH[]RZHRMtᩗVؾ:/~u)ԍdg%=edVrISb{6vSu=(ܥ)mTv/J}̇8 S3ad:^hBSf؉OɔLhI_1d8,L><_A0y3rXq"'(۱;mFNII.v5_(^q~X>y{3צ I*Vܛv/jW' T'NR'j%ꔩ:mJ3SB}΋!-H-RJBТQoedi9tjENenPpke.%4]#{:>mkEɱdYWl\\\'nRM4&U>?Ќˉk÷!𴪛]]5}UqG~ݏI"O~s6(Ļ)qO~h}uԕd}Q~G,oE!&G&/]_H-O=o{k\̭bkv.Ô܈+;arZx)m?M\3lU$mk-CFXjTv6u' g:Vn_*qk:VC A%'4JV%EY)#BғO4<e׿jQQ]yUr4=wm[K1r׵%Iũ-O}|kC;/VcݩWZ)EHdžTru]8hgĵ-;=>U_ InvTm_jBM+QiF"9*{DI/iuo(=TzϖmPQl_v4z>T*ȴ>YF;ε\t]EH4ꌇ[VrLzef 2T^V>g2~kg5~Nק;{~Z~W}&ŒBӿS2$J?~(Yœ"˲ߩ\O]: J׉ښT{mmIѩn3˧)4LdFZ/zUG>U> n 5& ϴ-KJi2o]uKljvK3$bԔҚV旧iY5.ίfi96v7!v))FJM4{jG~Jt/lUE%pTAFe4qQk\ve۽/u/Im+W')v{\-E|Pms7߮DZRr۞/mu*1ՙaB܆ -xg3#6ۥtRogʌU)׎]ZҞNnŞr}F1Nnޞ;cZ{N}ۿMiuxʉ*3qi'9KHQ$WJxXyرŔe~[v5~/jN9Q4o6rJv FrdxM*iRjMzUinHdн7ᾞS=S'7 } ̽zt7K|_g J=Lq+/Bw_\ۧx\HJUPzQ<hqF[V0x==CsU7q|^ {)Iq38$_A(VgcKu06Ƅ"%i~_ˉk QCܣB8Ku/񋇵u([w}$F|8TՠI.E !;RJ^}MɒD_q2];Ɖ{5}*n7nEInO{Mwv}&q+v [V}Ĝ@%>#dXQ$f;iep.GquixVt x6bj͵mlKقQ[T]zs/&yەnM'W}!Fp_d^Tu N{ɻ'l{խ2.sTu{W^H&;1s)Pӛ6>$mě;Łnj= fLT)>׸+qReɴ[UR\L*P/!$Ӊ3Q 'K=m~6XqW3^W+ųO_[F$rR*u"T%@O +%# ]˽!aܽz{ͷvQh쩎]hGތ5ɇ*DzJDRNLi 4:{~2FmXY-zzĽ^f=]uū{/+&c:Ma{ĝDp2m܍kHș/(--m_vݮK(V{R}.k&yƴ7i^4@3f sK3^Ř˸B=]?gt5KbZB<e;kQLpxuWC}n 5ҴepB##~q= `x]KWF {GfŲ}?G.I9pjWkU]>={7q{kO/^I3==f1ɏ%nnʫ/Zu_yXN<57ۍ'vy/"8넭M2eԷ&Y,в33%IkjMr7xf nmQkX4踼>a-GcIeތw&U=-:qnW)z¥j :WqSZvԒ#j"KrIU)%qrmRoDGQ~SYRsu*V)  ,/x)MFD6O#]z 96[Ui(JRfw'y$GeUީkdMF-ݻ98F2d[o{Rn0n-xsV6Dh|Eb2E:KCOӪv4SJCr"J!!m,hRLD| ZYFm/X~ΧfrN&4Ƒ=Z9Mh.Mܵw/BdrܥniŪ8ɧ|y%œ[M=_tj?F!z5\evM:\ ~F-sg钬OWq“iiȍ<Gi%%n2rqͻllƑ)okw7}\Uk-:&fj솘XerV9yZuʼşdFC=rmo%~ZN78X(N)_7.Εn1MpJ}62jjJdI";R5&iLԸc:jmqiQj$ujp\{;v5B񥍪Xn Ą4qOERjzN(Ga٠䌡)p*v(J7#ZۻZ8O W uONb+^Qipv9GvֽƼϯrYƖKGJQDNPhRJjᡧC"21"9ѓS1;R_O7/WGz)8fE%F2ukmvSov/iZ&/]~KmI[:^~ͤ\kMi稜\ywJt3W7 8Ʒ~ݥeFgѼw"8VVSج\뻆}ݭ/J6Q)d|)zU3>k\L=;ow֯gN3pKѫ|wmkZ$z^2R:E)f>ς нd|#׆?\ǔpV{;\$ƵE%-ͪm0S6[n< kE[}mvE4DDZ^$OZ0*$~XUv҅B@^?]so#%ojw;Y#SxxueBگy v^i-)s)zV jC{7Gt.w3v,ygg8s]aE_,*E tY5k٨h=o"m泏:\6w噓aiL׎n^c\75AGkЯ0Lf46َ`egZ˓p/k;̛]kq!ݸzpԭG"}R9Ve>ˏHUjJ-&7nrnwG*Xv\˱/vN}O)ʼn&CV͍f̵]r\PMB-6Du-#RͰtRN^)mT _}nSȕC*_xBuTkJW[`ɩ`ejvsngP ڻ.-WUtܑqԹQj)t;vN&RNũT+8%IXӃ5fK՛-d9 ]CƑm|nZ-6=Hz,*aEm W3VzRšdY~Xf׀Xx"]s;)5u*ُHB BRGS6bݶؿ 9j[1*jױga7oX CUI%0v#~\-O-Ꙛuɷ쏪&5mY٦M`LJ2qK~HZbr =N'YobI. (^ ׾{_ ?OJ`S`3BN[}5w6:ǵ/iSlt=4F*d&T4y/#. ɵim5Uֲf 眕6Y7 fơ=3dϕq뚩$qTM-%r!$@A? ޾V0c~{[{;򥧅a~ڵ»&ڄv1ek=wb MLkNAԬw-x>~/r=e73VeVN)K%Sښe"+3uXuچrn ֺVzscJ峻m}vb㶓n\YbIUBT%*,0nov=;z꣓S/nSXSpl##k9mXGrZv^Gde!ŷRԠzQyjC]`gToPov{j~KRBMY}i[߶9KL2ԉO0K#m>wB[ٍ+n[[b٦DX ݲpo] [\m5qdT()mo4Oy9Ie b][wղmM~vmi۱~t \}$яimRk(L c Cvk7r9_r1 ;zv|F@KyZ[&jEji/"6$69ml#e]9s\{ScL}Ȣؿ0q/nZ*t,CLoD߉Njǚy=Pgmu6^]l-["çUʖMlʍp-"qmU>۷uFOJ%Ǔkx 'g=睋k[3u,{³WɘݪF]ՍeFX"Oy\,cچ=w/gn Ļ]#2? vqy-gXnR.^}ݺFs{ŝG]}e|#0mjx"ƬWكm?rgU^xVB":Dt>@LRbun~ݭ,w+v⪕;\U(RYa61>#Jm˞Μ9g9XKaG='u8gf}'qy#ɉw J]We.ʲ-<+&q%s?2dњztҼn`cΤmmqMdz O[-ߩӲ&;[tmܝVnr">{x<8U+p:Ig]zjGkt,uzf}dؠoJaکqEq -(:d<պ=eKy[˗^%ZXkX[C2߱\ITTLGzANM￵i]K>UsOGDDD.ZF6* ҃V Zhz{'xp^`wo8r0h ZmJ5"jb[l=yUu7-;7IT%:jFjߖm0tzU'K)څNۧYJ)4IQ}^KWm7kSP>q;ނ#)'n7&׊r?óM{IwR\j2Qn[v pe#/tAF\ϵ225q֒om6z})6҅*oqDsMf CNIN=T S2t,_ѧ}kveMF0J\Rnnݙܹy[rUc-j{yGtkQ%s]5qB.Nw.JN1LvR Ui5J ZESQԙr):MJ+g}χ!2;q([jAud][ljVK3$ײSJI=/|&tl'*n۽f.frܥ jQO8>&Z];.|7T/C}$ڋUmP2Reҭ8hFF\L 3~e v\۫]ݝNmrnB%*]Z«hKc=BTLG :V74$=Ǘy+EX'4tn(I:Ѝ;Df8c,k1%dJ6.j6ź{N~l6&*fœI7 WAlGOu-ҢH,,(ǔe뿋쩨kM܍ZſgRvQ' 9)?n|er˭|I|-fGK.rΛp8XV1%K6mvG+tc+qE&ǸC_Nm:l=_/m5^[dߌڇ.c<%:)tQ$Ow~-aY;UJ>=F)2[nk؆?훐M=l6[4(O.]2#-H^n#->&mp5~Fӛ+|| S,xag%qkEUzUgæBhߕP(7]kFnq?֖CpruZ6*rEڊtS|*tI*E}7R<,nUU֫^I7Q*mSly%rdȓd8hE<9oHhMfNSRj[i7D[Rj݊+kდq{"$$H?p\̅S?㭻;t~R߁)^/>Qj`yt[w ԛ;²~+ߔ_ YW~|o]?x^ᯛ `ʼn;g)T@vWn]>&4lp+$D̢1l|ȨF%-}.9[}w~ ԠLM9hСablfe&QoW!s?wjLK?s7yO>(=C~_nyǜu?v3vyo oI@qV-jeES^[9WoSܝh"l2C1a͔CiJ@3:Pճw=/7ovuk+\V;lDgն<[A+rX~d;m!_s8ݖ׷;;.0llUC+?i#_crʙ1~C.\–q ul8Hܶ2m`ܻM3Tov|Bs rɵ"oLS- DКw=Tv@f'6|YlD͓Y%׵-#Ѯo%:&!3o%\J<02;K87>^vgƓ# ;ݝmz^Y6=PS39U%~ &f# }o!muH;ʲŇ˷yvP+&.7e[3'vR4Yj̗IZ`e˽3o[WU{ m[sUbۋZǾۆl6~9'V*.\S2<Sd*zY[aŶ`]C$n.v^Ʌ dng>ەZ,Mmϑ :n6nϦezWqUJ4! ۇ4R! =>>Fn|Q[{pRO17ƕ~._I''00k=b՛o}Osðc2'o\3}ݭQ^2 . R1yKȣtAݿ-uܾw!`?1Whn|gzUo[ECWwjUIן)^h#1ɭ!/Z np;o;ΗŻkXs."6E`Z1 עӐ9Kl8qd q} 2Stt;#j>;խabONŗ=fwP1j)l6J̶|gV2`y/0E˛6+ԫ1? 6}KW c\KoKͨ2ۅFw–s*TԞLיuDx .kCzWXhy۶gLu|%TnupǺl-S* PRaLnT+c+*xl.v!.U=|; !_L̎뱚U=4hm:ٯ"y)$:>%(n}X'p[ȴ ^˒4kƓmzDx \ 'NqamP7nyN݅=j7%McSڵj%STy qXymvCg{w/w=wSW5r̹u erծˊsOm=DhEҚRb#n)QOxtվQwe]I}wCa'"[ۂ-z}2UuKP$㜉ԧ:mc<Ý>RoL?wu|%ҷ&K y_!y9 ??:tq3(UU-lkS'ɸ@jdzQˬR] EVPW1DJq2n:,c|ǻ̑;y{X,ۂ.u.b˕u.tKBjQ"[S園S`ٮdNبeJ&9Ơ ~0a(Vm٘L+Jr*vڑE( x0+tp˕ n';wm-ޜMOxX>{#2%jgb2M[`K*\5@8l'e=0u+w ֘鳾{y܀:R*Ya]"Ӧ%ktynlۣ65,3gU}{GYrb;ge'TKwǘ.,rpܚV]Tr,!dp /ԺU,xՉ>s׽~W5oTh yx?xrrx?)?ilbT׬,z$Ԏ.UH٠\U1pU:]JwSrGZq8àd驐,N67QYBӢD㏙W!Q25ϸo9ms-7-%3CihO.J鯽-;MZM8ku-7k9S$8]q2E(}bۏI[DKOK}3KUB^u %Y,u.-&f#]'܆o$x`Yu,dzwM;#oKxn;\[d7}Rb+*Y䛂ZuBӱl{j0O̓}LhK;[aֶaGL{Cb#S.T[>߃F]NK"u^LUʐ_ykW?!GRj29͖qa'0[npcDvV)qz9R)PۨM^aJx W] r>];eN3vxdmĘ(5W2K1䪖weF{mE/QP6\u54x5[hۮ-Nk”i[lUgL]J}5 S:EhiUrgHl!ŒJ$pe=q^b͵Q' ?6|R\,JA ڵ"TDꈭ:ymg`B5t%M] <N_zv2_Ortٵ/i/ReӮ*7[qүqEG* m"[I:6e^p"I$jԴęh!m)]GZkcjS!{e^z}+Cѥ9;R|/ֱeiUԏCNu2Zhcٗg$ݭwvr P8*7/Lk~I'Km1+MW%Bk|oOm>-#qj*|Dbѱkn|n{v#jĮqNpMIUm(7Liz;{ҜݞڝVƚVϬ+sO!OstGvxӉ']uӎ4g_ 1^-8ۦ k!)Ύ5O;YSB#2Zzχ;<.ֵOtge~.(RC#wFZeGZٸ6FFJ4e2ˇpJT$[wgV)q6muDGJ56q\I!̗ y/I~RtJ9kJ]Iy*'FN0s.[l!fw'y(7$œ WƫgyΙdMEU JQJv̋vmrۖ.jWR_M֨djYgSj0^\y'EoECjm$ IƩK>Z28J2TiJ2N#}.s cArl嫶nB.FIJ.)۔\ZiM>/hLĸ=C1s[?YMqp|94- 鮝𦔽/k^#NT(Y LS$6˩}{;5 )B۷W$qpN)qqoot}ZDVә;7TiK|6f3h$dԄ}fqݡ>Nb򗉉+ͶO]>ߡ_VtYf79ڰիF sq~prս|QM)g%l0ocJȨHz V;Bb/kLAcfPJ,ԭ{ƍgpjNR6VSI*$!yV足jᇑ.](EܣqM\qJ2eZT).<9UB/(B0j)mtKEj#׿fDI-=rZړj|'Nڤ]k*i$5qt"ݙPM6E4ke^Z8ۏhz$Q(R Ay2zfRñnpnkbkI:=j &ΝșW?׵d{+ύM'??XqeeĽ.[o=UxFS=ӷdZwenՄ]_X=ĭVa* pKs0ބۍfJ3 gz̚i|wnxtjc¼5${(1fXQ65ȼb̶Zkn>%FQMJXӡ{TZEVNᖣimT/37cNJUPnP҂ZOE~"-Rc4^b- FEͧtf5[)S!OZIښݲ͑;tvܡ+N)AR=hCNn;wL16-:特7M$=Tҕ-.R[HٷnXk sn[ҞD-0WS9p9:-Ϸ-jѬNu{ҹfv)[Ľvwfg(ٷfe+0mYj8Q1\ݧg]Eǎvڿc!4#j5̋C2"}BRriFp7=ô\TZ:\BLfj#I22װ<;صZl j 6:l"6]۸ K'6RTѯ^ئOԓV\?$x7s#r:Oh{ց=MmuHԷd{pN /܅:UE#Yy+(SgQ(Щ)RHzw>^Ѿݻ>mK&^ '$Jۻ&w%F|xfz%˳ L~3N?Cy9 v w/{ƿ kz3x> sXv}vP"@WyC z`'톽Dw%-tt yVY\wmuPYQA0iG-2JP,6/gˢ]u.-n!Zw.N7Q]Df}Q0({a\@=i_X7gFǘ8^⻲}G MZ1)WEfO12G+=-B@z\`||w6ċj߬m}UwRox֢I &c~XGP6Qndpvܻul'V7^FJt^{b^B(L~sѣ6@߿^xqU!ڙ5|Vpvef-uӥ^3  FSDɯKD%0r}FF穛r7 +o"V8tv̖NQU!5uFd"bCr^bJ=֤fM#ʳԷP0O-9xRBm\=`r-:;~3Tl(nXtXi%2Vٛ#vwqƴ`L@"H‹qW.j,JM5B[)WܺUeZFqc'V˷1W7V̾-MHФwn8N;HPSdݷC7&2j.W\τGŎ'Vb]c.x+Rx1%C2T{myg[qU|+m:M:շ8҉yWd)ՋWS%%:iqlʹmGwݹ WnNŤѩ5(9hTٵDdGUi-)vSs2 2{OnT$Xck n:¶(lASLeȔBjμPpTb2~N2~%^k[ܗ[Jzs0ӓHBKq[}JَA-$dFQgjxxFv4r/x*Rm% `4J(&iv7SkԲmSH1YWmx 8n.k']:Z˭_W >ڃXЩ. jTq%Aā[E}amc]D:rmHRiu:uӚӢ\p(5-q%e)(۬ҖȽIf<߽pr&ݫVfY91q2ĭEQgYbTGQ&,yL+N$[q*RVۉQ=FuTܻ>f>f㋳8N6$܌n)9&»iˤsX,݅܍ȩv+sRTpO}d?Wn/Inpȸ%O]StQO|v5\}7Zwb.AIVK^:wb{[uݯcytO߶S<{8KSRׁH̏N7ۚ[xkwYy_'ZӵF+>쌛ZUĦreE9F[24De{}@:ExWs-\ǻ7K-\JNvEk%:s˙#κ].oͳ;լ7wB6nwu:$L; DkI#Wz.:Xp(˅v$Sq,wn\qIN-e<5Oe+vuYTpcojUI_ާP8 O 7&VL8z$_B-H-[uh]T{|8=qVRN-:Ij:7PUtXϷmy鉿:RIM~33ӸS2#׳GdŲ5+/Bx{(WzȨ5Y㞎#|˖+ ط.|e<o/rߔX>7s}VE.OVti׽ .5nNJO"95{#q}Ay9do]R"M6z\tnNS-D!@3N_jicWsy*5uٮRcWv/.,j}=S)j5C^> Ie =gu9ӛqjtz]۪TMoߧI!Ǧ¶m:,"[L!{qAv-o 3{"KʼnrIkfٶj2ƙ؄S`7` k6jzޞ?e5G&6uʷ2%ԒRKE*G\Npom F/V |C0.q_eenƣ<5Oh'67ɪn[SĽ{ڔjǘzs;~׌(ۂ`ܢ1ƣ` _l9Va6%UQWh~P~\F^ZHR@:ۧCJ{ôGeBh;~ۧnU J\O+n2 RҠ)ng}Kh{5+S×ܛ.1ZjG)iRȤIN 4%{oΜ/eO[Nffd ĹK?nnԼMqX'܌nZvq<ķbFnͪaQ`5 s,M_լ?-@_{w{ӺձJ}GF[%v\5[ŒGkOw/ΜM9rjË%2+rd~+󲕛C9U۳r[aJǭm|˒LAʨSCq[XMۺoubfp:t+ΤĻo ][ zt-*67kvS7D·MMCQXm;)܎n_h%]4ܙnRk!]ڵsDUF"`R, &#R_*[z*ZqFXɻ]7|۵w+'pFDەs=r./ᐚm3Hשy yD"jHCr':sA65نѮ^o1V/ f;nFr3VM)e*- s D'H݅fӧ\*޷[k<7u<-]֍Q8R h|p=WlW3s%Q %3l}@U-K6f-NϿu|ڴmWN׮[׸F*mW\%r! C78:޳vBG7ŵ.JթԚ2x)ST!řn~9 W:Wpܢ件{xf8ٳwKE ҰWxVB\qBZ 2wMb[lGSnyԚ~z9ZmያvoN2Afnݽjf>)j3 !;gOYʹK" Wftڎ+׭b*2ϻK>ۢӱeyԪXISUm[z+ugX%0lϏnvg!;t{BqPj>PyvR7Cj]O%+ݲ :qiMj6W}3vC/R=4Som]ŗ=ю, TF6U_-\6MyskwMr&Q\wjKܩyMϣUj0*}RZܷSdY3>Zjqj6TgzpA/M`/Cmл,޻feE[/+uk^Vs1W$G(JsW2ٰu*߻q*Y޵.Wi:ur5T),=0uRmho.twܖiYwrWHntvEj8qhf`Ͻpf(R&>Ki%I7$QӖm-2 ~yߗQ-앑/ x[k8nw.c㩵k}]FkbJl:{.(˩n0Hqvαp7 귎.Gupx[N`Yq'+ruU7[ү+>!xrȫoSo]OC# d^Q]\>!ƛGw^Mx"-+%vdX-:M2UR%d>%l ioSu6lsj7D P>XxHz Ukà(n^Q V>5cVtWj SEiJdznyej[lE' 3kuٌNn4JW)gB {4 j6&]' m-(ZMEz8cz>WZ6#7+[,MR-Z!4ܓtCyE|umj1ƽvƷV\;%>Q :#Le(iVz5 4ũۤUWxX ^(ҔsլB2w-V ^R+; ˂M\z+Uwr+RWY⺧~ Q*JcYSNSλUd8in=v K낫k\IRרSUaCFmϿ5̗P|u ZTԕ}>oYѲ1sfP+sQkX8Gb~6r,s>^\,mGL+7[n-E\.Fqḕcl*Jmjb5 ,m]c}NXfeVlǸJ5eˡ$4%g~N p4Y*WwW٧<8v#;qԩTut,m"#Y D\5V`\\Lȋ];LȇiS6ϝZ l>LruR\v=ǘϔDg=ԈdFZ+M{=|,[;0>RiSi4,S5}yxw&(E7&fݙ4UՕ! ~'Id)]ǽu2K-fޭ \08Vڅ쓬=Vy^^ IhyKR-B#Ըr=]mܻӾ'*Umkoy rTqT_i,/8Q^<ݤ|4ԻO(܄"'5N~#m.(Ҿ2i6Uev&I*<}҄$eNtÛzyWJubW^iBW.܅Wڮg]irO6Ve90sgv.+sV޿aޔ[p?3q*FutUo*eL\KM'EG*ZcAFfG5J 5jj=MJ3OK:k˝'NMB7m3uFҕ\-Ywg%PRqMIyZGY9|μvn߻5cWݷa^+X֥vnݘ\v7m>Fgzv"-;Ew֝}1|RjN𿊀7g#֟*GQQ|#/bo]p$>_Un9гUbn9׃ErQBU-^vDmVh'<R[fdHT]*~}3j;nvjc7s-rӳ Y8[n[1pJx kX[Jk9Mn!_Nю6x:iZ˦U |߉^Ԛ݃hYxk &U^bwKk.[jE+P(˞=9j@snCv7%c_7=xǁ<l {t'酚+1F‹l׭:ݻILruǶkL-L(K0L1&>wXB(pm;1fpnlp֓%Skidkt(U +xulo'/ڕeN r=^pZZ:Pnj8Hf"48ijY[ N[yZٻ+=  ø:3 ?^ܷ^Sr#YK[UF?CuhC b]GM')mڏsNrܗI]ljq6VB. W,UK"YX5{c >Iqā> T:n!,5l2VzCl|+I[*SrjnS6٨y+x,@>П.g+!rn9>N|W>OZT_ut Y""v7|sfި;Pclm EùN,{'fNT%U&LfH8~1v>Il}统u6P˗c(WV~H^bMU.o*oOF0N:_:6Smr_.b+|ݶYY غF,mwjv>f*>QM뭱Sd:`N{l/⎱;n-z~"Gze퇎J5S KG9!Gn;N1 ݎ h6m|S?ɂ5'WOÞ 7|7^ao @mxGmi^jϽ>01Mf0լD3-2T. VXR"ɥV Kl J O7|u?bvа;6.eߓ|[1bmRr,eRz`z 6܎-ͨku͹Fː dPhYgZUj}nvX;z=gVեTv_J }\1n7w2J?ޘγc\E 1Aޑzq;\r]]\Y&[nsNei\uURje*Qk2CSl*xJz-xٶlm+|UjUؓ`Ladqiĩ!Gd\W~fz;Tn*PdRM&T4`չSWq5k훶(N"Ӎ% V]֦wb.nUO!u*J&Oӕ2e|Z=eV쫚΅g#+/RW:طnbi*Wyo)p{:ETKؚR(RY+r웓r(IF) VmȵNB:h Q1ғ|u8E]{,'$-TR[j49l*3"I鯴zhd>Q+\BkNF=.$ZR4Nwհ(IpNi.(Gi33#33e$FXK*NdWrud[r{xnk$v2ıh+J1TQ[#JQl[tRO]LHKٮ NӍnF񨔤֞Em'MILB"ԋ%dBŋ+p̿_17jzT~4pc Vo\ƹb9Rq-'1j;8ܗ)hE%DZKS<璸Bu*%*Yw5ڻ9ۣ^z4U; Ñk\U(o~G?VUĎ:?P?_F_Kߤ~ᓾI |pr.Ok\SklRhҪz{­P .}SktZ7UQ4ڌIM8̈eaӊJZ%FFZu,KZvln廐SNFIVtuNi?CM5]+Ph,{jN JSR$IS^tSUVrORYu.9WyP6 [Kiu m!X|]Y79ӄ)\ģ)pbڳr%*&ꑶ_-H*dzk)1 V3')UAϹٶWRxe'պn۫h7AR9 EAJeGLms!%D| A 5]/Q3eb̄vnVn%za\m kZnv([emqrIҕij|""><hjJשvvǕ|Pޟs}V~2&Z?+2N&Z4w@)4iSڪ_>/JN9Hiۏuf8'It[ȲR.hZ$ȋ_Y ~U<UUO*6b)Ovzڜj\R̋.$FsQuҊj^נ䈈y<zZIuP[}Qm=C?zN(Exqu/kn S-FzKZzOסӽjJ\)F3b!r5ٝ|;6 o=-3*λ]αb\abqRi-w޵⦪~b8Kpo)Z=>)ғ"5/GTZLE-輵f7ݘ۹~+&+w/7GFI:l33fg.N~۲\2|*cnermnnM+Fq"ѪIz%j =YW8@~gc/~?N'?)«qȸs➟n=k" X“m֮VreMh2[uݖ] *FܖN)MȐ`f0 g,C9̑o;ddudJ=In13:ݒvvdMUEJLp^,6t-@͐9'{7m{-3,>hnF;ѰM)->>+Ěz!R* :`e--m7nB\u{b U>[8֪]6^ߤLʦ\DFNo$$dͶlgno8OrsQ\l̯hRo8tuNo+ CTxu!2[>ctFpeޓƻֶR"3QrQuOѳgwQr;S~)6HhZw/GgVTmUf_yt7%$];zLWF̰xy2Ʉu!MCmš_0[W6jf#a-KLi+3Q7c^qg%s<1aYIQeZf+}>;S6L0]Yu_h9߻<ƅpmiM$AVvŚ,*#t2.8Y)-Zhshü97/#Oro"u^/uFgWɺ,p:6a,^x%$Yve^3PƗMnTP&yS}OJ '덫MH^:rXԴJۋ/rI;S*,+yz1hv)Qw^ڍJ2oL׊q(\fDj:^T%vOadɂnS}ZO)N*λdaȜkG_PIEO}нa(^iQX᯦-7^)%g'SJx(.S9zVɴZ{E ))ۅi/s7 VIV-|sj0*UBTHIqRf>FP$KqN0 R̻8j\GcC}IUz\i 6F)Q{Gҧ3qSzKj-Az VЛS-zy:8*mNk|D鿓ND2u+0Yŝ7kqm·?8Ib]u>˗^_>(]vӋzv+ݩ){vZrJ2RQ몋C$z [,pp,8mڊbR]Il .f~d/ݓs㓓mͶ{mgjQwn=Oic9ܚm4Q/6ݨ[TƧ?nԶoytf{@AzT{e{[O'ZRZt~AGD?s3􌿂ՉIw'|~U\ w~di:Kޱ)U/sU%njѩ&GSP^ǝd)..!^U` 1wX[aԇSxoFV6_扐)T 2Mfd=ۖͭiZ7KK Bi9%7@<3<ճԻU,},a}FRqɛr i@ONJvK KLN M, ʖv0n-]DwlI-X6ܶ$Jʴh5O+mOI+Ra瞠\ MG7BفjYo1#͖0V`Ѱ2M?c8>-Crt*JkIGS:e#hPKx[鱼>{5m;wcն&>j-M֥^َ) 6yȜl_w{-ō̱r> U=]iw3)r*]:K]6BdCTZ|>gf}LW}[$'Y5 &c -j.z6R 67MԷFMnÌwI7w5E}o޽+K ֵy4܌ȥW"COyR[q5Ӱ͙f[v"_#q{MV6܍3"u9BK(41ӯqˇc${ߝCi6I(OmθzҜ5k^:>Jzw.>qV8{vU[ڶEm|DžBz].KHjI]x;Mɗ{m,qZXr忇2u^RO2Z}ZێS[2Jen!*NDcrBUً4<ǼMҲs1Zw57c3&ĖڻzmP*FuJG1-dN:|OU}ҵgi2t~F^^Z.VxjvŧnNNh<:]^~NN+ge^g.SԔGFe߯'[vn'(ScJ]kܗ7eJOlRrfziݮq̋S"\*U<*W]k$FջV}? 7g#֟*GQQ|#/bo]p$>_Un9;l S VvQU%OLU{οmU6bZ1MTx%!֙Q7, J=!3 ;Q,ڌ;6ͱ݅q^&ߔ·n #WbwӖX.HtG)N&d̵zpI,n cu ޖUj+VXUp[w]N o.J6Z8Ts&utxln;~HPHS/xw`G\ʡ¿rj Z^vt"[L:SD\h0sUwR,}[x^X,R2Vn< ]2YDr[SRKs8tXb̷G?Ps Tv 3be,zVz D[/I.KOEQrm'$7|[J>r S`5յwT#\w1FTz\Ԛ &"ׅhSHrD\'r]~/>p;:Piuu:"9ő=tTaS7V2rӷk7mb[^WmPp*[y.Þ6f]cizJCgRR@UVl큝.WJP1N{/\whZ ػϧӱE7|E֫Sί.x-Y&pi%v''-x6r'Ws*6=DwwUu]=C?MK [yrtܒG$!WGqJ*%SAz ED[^)/tė/g=#Omd.|^n/sl׉g DZqemqowݮRzUܜ=ڽ-o/Iۖ;qVʘgPp|mm;6zGl9.8pwWgsJ2qPbe}}UpNjٯ}7TMQKrؽtEx%v w߾8%|j;~|}pK]ơ/ w߾8%|j;~|}pK]ơ/ w&~e_H 8PL7:%ʭ5Kw&U2vwR_+rm'}C7#rWoO&HoG?M$UR7{FU]u ;# !Wk`|W>׹潇9Vn)6)*ҹ{%qV4q>W1vi#T"Qk&GwxcJBJ- Ϸ^ˁxkU}ԣ/3.;]J=<*)cS)ROK9H=,r zX @)cS)Da^ԽQ gxJI=w֣gf*TRj

• Received: June 9, 2014   • Accepted: October 14, 2014

© Song et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2014

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

  • 894 Views
  • 1 Download
  • 9 Web of Science
  • 9 Crossref
  • 8 Scopus
prev next
  • Background
    Awareness about lead poisoning in South Korea has increased; however, occupational exposures occurring in small-scale businesses have not been thoroughly investigated. We report two cases of high lead exposure in a leaded bronze ingot foundry.
  • Case presentation
    Two employees, a 54-year-old primary operator and a 46-year-old assistant, at a small-scale metalworking company who had been employed for 18 years and 1 month, respectively, showed elevated blood lead levels (61.1 μg/dL and 51.7 μg/dL, respectively) at an occupational health checkup. Neither worker complained of abnormal symptoms nor signs related to lead poisoning. Health assessment follow-ups were conducted and biological exposure indices of lead were calculated every four weeks. After the initial follow-up assessment, both workers were relocated from the foundry process to the metalworking process. In addition, a localized exhaust system was installed after the second follow-up.
  • Conclusions
    Foundry workers in a small-scale businesses might be at high risk of lead exposure because these businesses might be vulnerable to poor industrial hygiene. Therefore, regular occupational health checkups are required.
Bronze is an alloy consisting primarily of copper, but also contains other elements including manganese and aluminum. Leaded bronze (bronze containing lead) increases the plasticity of bronze, simplifies product fabrication, helps retain favorable thermal conductivity, and helps maintain good lubricity [1,2]. As a result, leaded bronze is used for fabrication processes that require precision. When a leaded bronze ingot is melted at high temperatures of 500°C–600°C, lead fumes are created as a by-product. The melting point of lead (327.46°C) is relatively lower than that of other substances; therefore, lead easily sublimates, even at particularly low temperatures. For these reasons, the melting and casting of leaded bronze ingots can result in lead exposure, which occurs as the lead fumes spread throughout the workplace.
The distribution of inhaled lead fumes in the human respiratory tract depends on particle size (typically <5 μm can be damaging), the anatomy of the respiratory tract, mucociliary clearance, and breathing habits [3]. In cases of poor personal hygiene, frequent cigarette smoking, or poor environmental conditions, lead fumes can be absorbed orally by the human body, and lead intake can cause lead poisoning in some individuals. Acute or chronic symptoms of lead poisoning can manifest in multiple systems of the body including the central and peripheral nervous systems, erythropoietin system, cardiovascular system, musculoskeletal system, immune system, and/or reproductive system [4].
When lead absorbed by the human body enters the bloodstream, the blood lead level (BLL) rises. Several guidelines for BLL monitoring have been proposed. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends that individuals avoid tasks that lead to further lead exposure if their BLL is ≥60 μg/dL (or reaches a mean level of 50 μg/dL on three or more tests) [5]. In South Korea, guidelines for periodic occupational health checkups recommend reducing lead exposure if the BLL is ≥30 μg/dL and that these individuals receive a checkup every 2 months until two consecutive BLLs readings are <30 μg/dL [6].
Reported cases of occupational lead poisoning in South Korea include lead battery poisoning (1972 and 1986), the Janghang Smelting lead poisoning incident (1978), and the Banwol Industrial Complex lead poisoning incident (1983) [7-9]. Since these incidents, legal regulations and policies have been strengthened and regular measurements of workplace environmental levels and health examinations have been performed; as a result, the incidence of lead poisoning has decreased [10-12]. However, incidences of lead poisoning have still been reported in a small-scale businesses with long-term employees because legal management is difficult [13]. To our knowledge, no reported cases of high-lead exposure among leaded bronze ingot foundry workers are present in South Korea. Here, we present two cases with increased BLLs after working in a leaded bronze ingot foundry.
Occupational and medical history
The first patient was a 54-year-old man with 18 years of experience working in a foundry as a primary operator. He had been employed at a hydraulic equipment manufacturing company for the past 10 years and worked at the melting furnace and in molding frame department. He had a history of hyperthyroidism and smoked five pack-years, but had no family history of disease.
The second patient was a 46-year-old man with seven, three, and seven years of experience plating, driving a taxi, and driving a truck, respectively. He had been employed at the same manufacturing company as an assistant operator at the melting furnace and in molding frame department for one month. He had no history of illness or any hereditary diseases, but smoked 20 pack-years.
Neither patient had a history of herbal or health supplement intake. During the initial occupational health checkup, neither patient complained of abnormal symptoms such as muscle weakness, paresthesia, abdominal colicky pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or constipation. No abnormalities in the heart or respiratory sounds were noted upon auscultation. In addition, no tenderness or distension was observed during the abdominal examination. Moreover, no indications of Burton’s lines around the gums were present, and neither patient showed signs of pallor, petechiae, dyspnea on exertion, fatigue, malaise, or other symptoms related with anemia.
Workplace evaluation
The small-scale, hydraulic machine parts manufacturing company that employed these two patients also employed 17 other workers (19 employees in total). After industrial materials were received at the foundry, they were subjected to the melting and molding processes, heat treatment, rough grinding, and the finishing process using a computerized numeral control (CNC) and machining center-tooling system. Both patients were involved in the melting and molding processes that required pre-heating the furnace for approximately 2.5 h from 6:30 AM to 9:00 AM and melting the primary material while simultaneously using reducing agents; these steps are performed to improve machinability (through higher plasticity), thermal conductivity, and lubricity. The primary material handled was a leaded bronze ingot (9%–11% lead content), and the company had an inspection certificate for the primary material (Table 1). Two different powder reducing agents were used. The first powder contained carbon that was used to maintain the oxygen level and temperature of the molten metal as well as block any moisture. The second powder contained a mixture of borax and ammonium chloride, an inorganic flux, which was used to maintain the product’s vacuum condition and lower the melting point of the primary material [14]. The company did not have a Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) for the reducing agents. The results of chemical composition analysis of the primary material and reducing agents are shown in Table 1.
Table 1
Chemical composition of raw materials
Chemical composition (%)
Base material Reducing agent
Inspection certificate Bulk sampling Bulk sampling * Carbon Bulk sampling* Borax
Cooper 77.0–81.0 79.950 0.189 0
Tin 9.0–11.0 9.320 0 0
Lead 9.0–11.0 10.310 0.203 0
Zinc −1.0 0.020 0.029 0
Iron −0.2 0.010 0.050 0
Nickel −1.0 0.290 0.020 0
Antimony −0.5 0.090 0 0
Phosphorus −0.05 0.009 0 0
Aluminium −0.005 0 0.007 0.036
Silicon −0.005 0 0 0
*Bulk sampling refers to the collection of the base material in the workplace and the laboratory analysis of these substances.
After the leaded bronze ingot was melted for 1–1.5 h, the molten metal was inserted into a molding frame for 5–10 min. This task was repeated five to six times per day. While the assistant operator prepared the preheated molten frame (Figure 1A), the primary operator would scoop the molten metal from the furnace and insert it into the molding frame (Figure 1B).
Figure 1
Pouring molten metal into a molding frame. (A) Setting of the molding frame by the assistant operator. (B) Pouring the molten metal into the molding frame by the primary operator.
40557_2014_9038_Fig1_HTML.jpg
The area in the foundry where the melting furnace and molding frames were set is isolated from other metalworking process areas. At the time of the initial occupational health checkup, the exhaust system used in the foundry consisted of an open canopy hood above the furnace. As such, the outlet for the exhaust air from the precipitator was located inside the foundry. Therefore, hazardous substances absorbed by the exhaust system might have been reintroduced into the foundry. The furnace was replaced every 2 months. However, we found an expended furnace in the furnace room that had been disassembled. The chemical composition analysis of the furnace revealed concentrations of lead, nickel, tin, and copper at 1.135%, 0.039%, 0.028%, and 4.112%, respectively. Respiratory protection masks (level 2 dusk masks, 3 M, 8710 L) were sometimes worn, but were usually removed when they became uncomfortable. The results of the work environment assessment are shown in Table 2. The airborne and personal lead concentrations of the melting furnace and molding frame were below the occupational exposure limit.
Table 2
Measurements in the work environment
Measured results (mg/ m 3 ) OEL (TWA, mg/ m 3 ) Initial measurement December 9, 2013 Follow -up measurement February 4, 2014
Primary operator Assistant operator Primary operator* Assistant operator* Area sample of the melting furnace Area sample of the molding frame
Lead 0.05 0.0073 ND 0.0013 0.0394 0.0310 0.0225
Nickel 0.5 0.0003 ND 0.0002 0.0001 0.0001 ND
Tin 2 0.0036 0.0002 ND ND ND ND
Cooper 1 0.0006 0.0003 0.0032 0.0013 0.0009 ND
ND, not detectable; OEL, occupational exposure limit; TWA, time-weighted average.
*New workers were assigned after the primary operator and his assistant were transferred out of the foundry.
After the first follow-up following the initial checkup, the two patients were removed from the foundry and relocated to the metalworking process (January 20, 2014). After the second follow-up, a localized exhaust system was installed (March 20, 2014); slot hood over the molding frame, enclosed canopy hood over the furnace and outside movement of the exhaust air outlet. Soon thereafter, the assistant operator left the company (March 24, 2014); hence, the fourth follow-up on this assistant was not conducted.
Health assessment and biological exposure indices
After the initial occupational health checkup, follow-up assessments were conducted every four weeks. The follow-up results of each patient are shown in Table 3. At the initial checkup, both the primary operator and assistant operator had an elevated BLL of 61.1 μg/dL and 51.7 μg/dL, respectively. However, at the first follow up, the BLL of the assistant (63.1 μg/dL) was higher than that of the primary operator’s was (68.8 μg/dL). After the patients had been relocated from the foundry to the metalworking process, the BLL of the assistant decreased at a slower rate than that of the primary operator did according to the results of the second and third follow-ups. At the initial blood test, the assistant had an increased white cell count of 10,090 μL, but this value normalized to 9,540 μL and 7,570 μL by the first and second follow-up tests, respectively. The diastolic blood pressure of the assistant was 90 mmHg at the initial checkup, but normalized by the follow-up tests. At the first follow-up, urine lead levels in the primary operator and assistant were 27.57 μg/g and 125.6 μg/g of creatinine, respectively; both values fall below the threshold of the recommended biological exposure index of 150 μg/g of creatinine.
Table 3
Clinical laboratory results
Primary operator Assistant operator
Blood lead level (μg/dL)
 Initial sampling (Dec. 24, 2013) 61.1 51.7
 1st follow-up sampling (Jan. 16, 2014) 63.1 68.8
 2nd follow-up sampling (Feb. 21, 2014)* 40.8 45.2
 3rd follow-up sampling (Mar. 24, 2014)* 39.0 44.7
 4th follow-up sampling (Apr. 24, 2014)* 42.0 -†
Blood analysis (at initial sampling)
 Hemoglobin (g/dL) 15.8 16.3
 Hematocrit (%) 46.4 47.6
 RBC (×103/μL) 5.39 5.56
 WBC (×103/μL) 5.68 10.09
 Platelet (×103/μL) 227 245
 Creatinine (mg/dL) 1 0.89
Urinary analysis (at 1st follow-up sampling)
 Urine lead level (μg/g creatinine) 27.57 125.6
 β2-microglobulin (mg/day) - 0.04
Blood pressure (at initial sampling)
 Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) 130 120
 Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) 70 90
Blood cell morphology
 1st follow-up sampling (Jan. 16, 2014) Slight platelet aggregation -
 2nd follow-up sampling (Feb. 21, 2014)* Slight platelet aggregation Normal
 3rd follow-up sampling (Mar. 24, 2014)* Normal Normal
 4th follow-up sampling (Apr. 24, 2014)* Normal -†
*After job reallocation.
†The assistant operator left the company before the fourth follow-up.
The white blood cell differential counts for both workers were within the normal range. The results of a blood cell morphology test in the primary operator showed slight platelet aggregation at the first and second follow-up tests, but this value normalized by the third and fourth follow-up tests. However, the blood cell morphology test results for the assistant remained normal. The primary operator had an elevated gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase level (57 U/L) at the initial health checkup, but this value normalized in the follow-up tests reaching 42 U/L by the third follow-up.
After the first follow-up, the BLL of three workers in the metalworking process (two workers in charge of the machining center tooling process and one worker in charge of the CNC process) and the on-site supervisor were also measured. Their BLLs were 22.66 μg/dL, 29.28 μg/dL, 20.98 μg/dL, and 26.70 μg/dL, respectively, with an average BLL of 24.91 ± 3.78 μg/dL.
Psychological tests
Elevated BLL is associated with psychological symptoms such as depression, anxiety, cognitive deficit, and memory loss [4,15]. As such, psychological tests were performed by trained psychologists at the first follow-up. These tests included a digit span to evaluate attention, the Seoul Verbal Learning Test to evaluate verbal memory, a verbal fluency test, the Stroop test, a psychomotor speed measurement, a working memory test using the Korean-Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale to evaluate frontal lobe function, the Korean version of the Boston Naming Test to evaluate language skills, the Rey-Osterrieth complex figure test to evaluate visuospatial skills, and the Hamilton Depression Scale and Beck Depression Scale to evaluate mood status. Slightly reduced psychomotor speed on the Korean-Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (raw score 41/135, percentile score 5) and a reduced interference score in the Stroop test (interference score 11, percentile score 10) were noted in the primary operator; however, all other results were normal.
Nerve conduction test
The primary operator complained of weakness while using chopsticks at the fourth follow-up; therefore, a nerve conduction velocity test was performed by a trained neurologist at the fourth follow-up. Results were consistent with carpal tunnel syndrome and included decreased sensory nerve action potential, slow sensory nerve conduction velocity in the forearm (wrist and palm) wrist segments of the right median nerve, prolonged terminal latency, decreased compound muscle action potential in the wrist (elbow and elbow) axilla segments of the right median nerve, and a prolonged F-wave in the right median nerve. Nerve conduction tests were not performed in the assistant because he left the company before the fourth follow-up.
This report documents two cases of high lead exposure in workers from a leaded bronze ingot foundry. In 1978, lead poisoning was reported in a major smelting factory located in Janghang, South Korea. Severely lead poisoned workers from this incident were admitted to the hospital to chelate the lead and lower their high BLLs [7]. Soon after, in October 1983, lead poisoning was reported in the Banwol Industrial Complex in South Korea. One hundred and one lead workers in seven factories that handled lead daily (six litharge-making factories and one storage-battery factory) were investigated. Among these, 33 cases of lead poisoning (BLL >80 μg/dL) and 36 cases of high lead absorption (BLL >60 μg/dL) were diagnosed [8]. In September 1986, 66 out of 258 lead workers in a storage-battery factory in South Korea were screened for lead poisoning and referred for laboratory tests; 29 of these workers were diagnosed with lead poisoning and 12 had severe lead poisoning that required hospital admission to chelate the lead and lower their BLLs [9].
The most important aspect in treating lead poisoning is eliminating the source of lead exposure. However, eliminating the source of lead can be very difficult depending on the socioeconomic challenges involved. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration and Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics have published guidelines of the clinical symptoms of lead poisoning to facilitate diagnosis and set standards for its management in suspected cases of lead exposure [5,16]. In general, BLL is used as an important biological indicator in clinical evaluations, worksite monitoring, and public health.
Shortly after lead is inhaled or ingested, it can enter the bloodstream and travel to soft tissues. After several weeks, the absorbed lead can be deposited and stored in mineralizing tissues such as bones. In the current study, we were unable used X-ray fluorescence to measure the workers’ long-term lead exposure. With X-ray fluorescence, we hypothesize that the bone lead level of the primary operator was higher than that of the assistant, considering his long exposure. Lead can also interfere with heme biosynthesis by inhibiting d-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase and ferrochelatase activity, thus increasing blood and plasma d-aminolevulinic acid and free erythrocyte protoporphyrins [17], which leads to anemia. In the primary operator and assistant, hemoglobin levels were 15.8 g/dL and 16.3 g/dL, respectively, which are both within the normal range; thus, it was assumed that lead exposure did affect the enzymatic heme pathway of these two workers. Lead poisoning may also result in abdominal pain, loss of appetite, vomiting, nausea, constipation, and/or diarrhea. No specific symptoms or signs were found in the review the patients’ history or during the physical examination. Lead poisoning can also cause peripheral nerve damage that causes muscle weakness. In addition, behavioral changes vision and hearing impairment are possible. At very high BLLs, lead can affect the brain causing convulsions, a coma, and even death [18]. Moreover, lead can inhibit the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor that is related with hippocampus-mediated learning and memory resulting in defects in the memory processes of the brain. Lead can also cause deficits in neurotransmission, disrupt neurotransmission and intracellular Ca2+ dynamics, and ultimately result in neurotoxicity [19]. Among the current cases, the primary operator showed a slightly reduced psychomotor speed and interference control during psychological assessment and had a right median nerve abnormality that is consistent with carpal tunnel syndrome.
Clinical symptoms of lead poisoning are typically associated with chronic lead poisoning; thus, cases of acute lead poisoning are difficult to diagnose. In certain cases, lead poisoning can manifest asymptomatically [20]. In the present cases, aside from subtle neurologic abnormalities in the primary operator, no specific clinical findings of lead poisoning were evident for either of the workers. Although we cannot eliminate the possibility that the aforementioned abnormal findings in the primary operator were the result of chronic lead exposure, the symptoms were not severe. Moreover, the associations between reduced motor conduction, short-term memory loss, and impaired visual-motor coordination with lead poisoning have not been evaluated [21]. Although our subjects had no clinical symptoms, subclinical changes such as behavioral changes, subclinical hypertension, or a subclinical tumor might have existed.
The assistant presented with a higher BLL than that of the primary operator at all follow-up evaluations, but not at the initial assessment. In the workplace, the assistant continuously stood in front of the molding frame during the molding frame preparation with his head bent towards the frame; therefore, his mask was in close contact with the molten metal and it was assumed that he inhaled a greater proportion of the lead fumes. Furthermore, the level of work experience might have influenced the differences in the BLLs between the primary and assistant operators. In addition, although an exhaust system was installed above the furnace, no exhaust system was present above the molding frame; thus, these workers were continuously exposed to lead fumes while transferring the molten metal during the casting process.
After the first follow-up, the primary and assistant operators had BLLs of approximately 40 μg/dL and were relocated the CNC department. Nevertheless, the BLL of the other CNC workers were found to be >20 μg/dL, which is much higher than the average in South Korea of 1.77 μg/dL that was reported in 2011 [21]. These findings suggest the possibility of background lead exposure at the work site. The smelting and casting processes and CNC/machining center tooling processes were separated by a wall; therefore, the BLLs of employees working in processes other than smelting likely did not become exposed to lead from the smelting process.
Metal cutting occurs at temperatures between 214°C–594°C [22]. As such, lead fumes caused by sublimation can also cause health damage in high-temperature cutting operations [16]. It is possible that the BLL of workers in other processes increased because of these lead fumes. Another possibility is the absorption of lead through the digestive tract and skin. One expended furnace had been left in the factory, and sand was strewn on the floor of the work site. We measured a lead content of >10% in the expended furnace and sand. Lead in these items may have contaminated the workers’ hands, clothes, and any drinks consumed in the workplace. Relevant studies have reported that 5%–10% of the lead absorbed through the digestive tract is ultimately absorbed by the human body [23]. Therefore, workers at the present site may have absorbed lead not only through the respiratory tract but also through the skin or mouth.
The atmospheric lead concentration in this work environment was less than the Ministry of Labour standard (0.05 mg/m3), but more than the Korean environmental atmospheric standard (0.0005 mg/m3) and EPA standard (0.00015 mg/m3) [24,25]. Since the atmospheric lead concentration does not reflect skin absorption, bodily accumulation, or personal hygiene maintenance, the correlation between the atmospheric lead concentration and BLL is considered weak [26]. In the present cases, the atmospheric lead concentration does not reflect the skin and oral exposure to lead dust at the work site. In addition, exposure to high concentrations of lead fumes during smelting work is assumed to occur while pouring molten metal into molding frames. Such tasks occur over a relatively short time (5–10 min per session, 5–6 sessions per day). Work environment measurements are collected as the mean lead exposure over 8 h; thus, this measurement may not have accurately reflected their instantaneous exposure to high lead concentrations. In addition, during the 8-h measurement period, the number of actual work sessions may have affected the measured results.
In the present work site, the lack of the MSDS for the primary material was substituted with an inspection certificate. Nevertheless, an MSDS of the reducing agents were not provided. Moreover, despite the fact that the furnace process requires a level 1 dust mask, workers at this company were only provided with level 2 dust masks. In addition, protective gear was worn inconsistently [27,28]. The work site near the furnace was also strewn with waste, such as that from the expended furnace, and high concentrations of lead were detected in this waste. Furthermore, exhaust systems were not properly installed at the work site.
Taken together, to help prevent lead exposure, all companies must be equipped with an MSDS for all materials used in their manufacturing process, and the owners and workers of these companies must all be aware of the contents of the MSDS. Furthermore, to minimize lead exposure, appropriate protective gear, including level 1 dust masks and protective goggles, should always be provided and worn, and an appropriate exhaust system must be installed. In addition, to eliminate contamination by lead dust, the work site should be cleaned daily with a vacuum cleaner or water. Smoking and eating/drinking should be prohibited at the work site to protect the workers, and facilities that promote personal hygiene by including sinks, baths, and washing machines should be made available. In addition, face washing and bathing should be mandatory after daily work. Employees should also be educated on the above materials, and any notifications regarding handling precautions and personal protection should be displayed in an easily visible location. Moreover, work environment measurements and specialist checkups should be conducted regularly to monitor the degree of lead exposure among workers. In cases of high lead exposure, appropriate intervention methods should be immediately performed to protect the health of workers [28].
Because our report only conducted follow-ups and observed two workers with high lead exposure after an occupational health checkup, we could not adequately investigate the source of lead exposure with respect to the entire work site or compare the lead exposure throughout the facility. Thus, future epidemiological studies on the workers at the present work site are needed.
To our knowledge, this is the first report of a high lead exposure in a leaded bronze ingot foundry in South Korea. Although the two workers studied here did not demonstrate clinical symptoms of lead poisoning, the BLLs of these workers did reach a maximum of 69 μg/dL, and even the other workers at the metalworking process, which were isolated from the foundry, exhibited a relatively high mean BLL of 24.91 ± 3.78 μg/dL. To prevent lead exposure among employees in smaller factories, appropriate periodic occupational health checkups and functional environment protection measurements to protect the workers’ health are needed.
We performed a retrospective chart review and collected no personal identification data. The Institutional Review Board of Inje University Busan Paik Hospital approved our waiver of written informed consent and review exemption (IRB No. 14–0115).

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interest.

Authors’ contributions

YJS, SAK, SYK, and CHS performed the medical checkups on all patients. SMK, SWJ, SAK, YJS, and CHS performed the workplace evaluation. YJS (background and case presentation), SAK, and NMK (conclusion) drafted the article. CHS devised and supervised the entire process. KHK, JHK, BCS, CKL, and JTL reviewed and revised the article. All of the authors read and approved the final manuscript.

  • 1. Puttlitz KJ, Stalter KA. SN-AG and SN-AG-X Solders and Properties. Handbook of Lead-Free Solder Technology for Microelectronic Assemblies. 2004, New York: CRC Pess; 273.Article
  • 2. Mel S. In: Mel S, editor. Lead and Alloys. Encyclopedia of Materials, Parts and Finishes. 2012, 2. New York: CRC Press; 349–350.
  • 3. Andrea H, Harun P, Brock TH. Aerosols – Dusts, Fumes and Mists [MAK Value Documentation, 1999]. The MAK Collection for Occupational Health and Safety. 2012, Weinheim: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA; 271–278.
  • 4. Jie L, Goyer RA, Waalkes MP. In: Klaassen CD, editor. Toxic Effects of Metals. Casarett&Doull’s Toxicology : The Basic Science of Poisons. 2008, 7. New York: McGraw-Hill; 943–947.
  • 5. ᅟ. OSHA Lead Standards. 2014.
  • 6. Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency. Lead and inorganic compounds, as Pb. Practical Guideline for Medical Examination of Employee (translated by Song YJ). 2013, Incheon: Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency; 222.
  • 7. Lee JS, You IS. A study on contents of heavy metal in water, soil, rice and urine of inhabitants along the Kum river. Korean J Occup Environ Med 1992;18(1):69–75.
  • 8. Lee IJ, Ahn KD, Jo KS, Kim NS. A study on the soil pollution in lead industry. J Korean Soc Occup Environ Hyg 2004;14(3):290–300.
  • 9. Kang PG, Kim YB, Ahn IS, Lee GJ. Occupational lead exposure of storage battery industry workers in Korea. Korean J Occup Environ Med 1998;10(4):438–449.ArticlePDF
  • 10. Ministry of Employment and Labor. Industrial Safety and Health Act. 2012, Seoul: ᅟ.
  • 11. Choi JW, Kim NS, Cho KS, Ham JO, Lee BK. The change of air lead concentrations in litharge making and smelting industries. J Korean Soc Occup Environ Hyg 2010;20:10–18.
  • 12. Lee BK. Occupational Health Management in the Lead Industry: The Korean Experience. Saf Health Work 2011;2(2):87–96. 10.5491/SHAW.2011.2.2.87. 22953192.ArticlePubMedPMC
  • 13. Koo BH, Kim YK, Lee SG, Kang DM, Kim JE. Detection of Cases and a Cause of Lead Exposure in Korean Steel Company. Korean J Occup Environ Med 2012;24(4):441–448.ArticlePDF
  • 14. George R. In: George R, editor. Metals and Related Minerals and Ores. Archaeomineralogy. 1999, 2. New York: Springer; 144.
  • 15. Bouchard MF, Bellinger DC, Weuve J, Matthews-Bellinger J, Gilman SE, Wright RO, Schwartz J, Weisskopf MG. Blood lead levels and major depressive disorder, panic disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder in US young adults. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2009;66(12):1313–1319. 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2009.164. 19996036.ArticlePubMedPMC
  • 16. ᅟ. Medical Management Guidelines for lead-Exposed Adults. 2014.
  • 17. ᅟ. Lead Toxicity. 2014.
  • 18. ᅟ. Guideline:Lead on construction projects. 2014.
  • 19. Neal AP, Guilarte TR. Mechanisms of lead and manganese neurotoxicity. Toxicol Res 2013;2:99–114. 10.1039/c2tx20064c.ArticlePubMedPMC
  • 20. Moline JM, Landrigan PJ. In: Linda R, Cullen MR, Carl Andrew B, Relich CA, editors. Lead. Textbook of Clinical Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 2005, 2. Phildelphia: Elsevier Saunders; 967–978.
  • 21. National Institute of Environmental Research. Korean National Environmental Health Survey; The First Stage (2009~2011). 2011, Incheon: ᅟ.
  • 22. Tanikic D, Manic M, Radenkovic G, Manic D. Metal cutting process parameters modeling and artificial intelligence approach. J Sci Ind Res India 2009;68:530–539.
  • 23. Richard L. In: Joseph LD, editor. Metals. Current Occupational & Environmental Medicine. 2007, 4. New York: McGraw-Hill; 413–438.
  • 24. Ministry of Environment. Enforcement Decree of the Framework Act on Environmental Policy. ᅟ 2012;ᅟ:ᅟ.
  • 25. Environmental Protection Agency. National Ambient Air Quality Standards for lead; Final rule. 2008, ᅟ: ᅟ.
  • 26. Park SG, Kim KJ, Chang SH. A study on the Correlation Between the Lead Concentration in Air and in Blood among Lead Workers. Korean J Occup Environ Med 1991;3(1):98–103.ArticlePDF
  • 27. Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency. Respiratory protection guideline (translated by Song YJ). 2014.
  • 28. Korea Occupational Safety and Health Agency. Guideline for Health management of Workers exposed by lead and inorganic lead (translated by Song YJ). 2014.

Figure & Data

REFERENCES

    Citations

    Citations to this article as recorded by  
    • Occupational Lead Exposure Among Civilian Indoor Shooting Range Workers in Korea: A Report of Blood Lead Levels and Airborne Lead
      Sungjin Park, Jaeyoung Park, Bumjoon Lee, Yi-Ryoung Lee, Jiho Kim, Younmo Cho, Hyeongyeong Choi, Kyeongyeon Kim
      Journal of Korean Medical Science.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
    • Comparison of Blood Lead Levels in Children and Adolescents with and Without Functional Abdominal Pain
      Fatemeh Famouri, Maryam Yazdi, Awat Feizii, Hossein Saneian, Peiman Nasri, Roya Kelishadi
      Advanced Biomedical Research.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
    • Association Between Blood Lead Level With High Blood Pressure in US (NHANES 1999–2018)
      Ziyao Huang
      Frontiers in Public Health.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
    • A systematic review of clinical and laboratory findings of lead poisoning: lessons from case reports
      Saeed Samarghandian, Farshad M. Shirazi, Farhad Saeedi, Babak Roshanravan, Ali Mohammad Pourbagher-Shahri, Emad Yeganeh Khorasani, Tahereh Farkhondeh, Jan Olav Aaseth, Mohammad Abdollahi, Omid Mehrpour
      Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology.2021; 429: 115681.     CrossRef
    • Exposure to lead and other toxic metals from informal foundries producing cookware from scrap metal
      Renee Anne Street, Walter Goessler, Saloshni Naidoo, Busisiwe Shezi, Nokulunga Cele, Jaqueline Rieger, Karl Ettinger, Tarylee Reddy, Angela Mathee
      Environmental Research.2020; 191: 109860.     CrossRef
    • Bayesian network model to diagnose WMSDs with working characteristics
      Gilseung Ahn, Sun Hur, Myung-Chul Jung
      International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics.2020; 26(2): 336.     CrossRef
    • Challenges in diagnosing lead poisoning: A review of occupationally and nonoccupationally exposed cases reported in India
      Monica Shirley Mani, Divyani Gurudas Nayak, Herman Sunil Dsouza
      Toxicology and Industrial Health.2020; 36(5): 346.     CrossRef
    • Lead Poisoning at an Indoor Firing Range
      Kyung Wook Kang, Won-Ju Park
      Journal of Korean Medical Science.2017; 32(10): 1713.     CrossRef
    • Occupational Lead Exposure from Indoor Firing Ranges in Korea
      Won-Ju Park, Suk-Ho Lee, Se-Ho Lee, Hye-Sik Yoon, Jai-Dong Moon
      Journal of Korean Medical Science.2016; 31(4): 497.     CrossRef

    • Cite
      CITE
      export Copy Download
      Close
      Download Citation
      Download a citation file in RIS format that can be imported by all major citation management software, including EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and Reference Manager.

      Format:
      • RIS — For EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks, and most other reference management software
      • BibTeX — For JabRef, BibDesk, and other BibTeX-specific software
      Include:
      • Citation for the content below
      High lead exposure in two leaded bronze ingot foundry workers
      Ann Occup Environ Med. 2014;26:38  Published online December 1, 2014
      Close
    • XML DownloadXML Download
    Figure
    • 0
    High lead exposure in two leaded bronze ingot foundry workers
    Image
    Figure 1 Pouring molten metal into a molding frame. (A) Setting of the molding frame by the assistant operator. (B) Pouring the molten metal into the molding frame by the primary operator.
    High lead exposure in two leaded bronze ingot foundry workers
    Chemical composition (%)
    Base material Reducing agent
    Inspection certificate Bulk sampling Bulk sampling * Carbon Bulk sampling* Borax
    Cooper77.0–81.079.9500.1890
    Tin9.0–11.09.32000
    Lead9.0–11.010.3100.2030
    Zinc−1.00.0200.0290
    Iron−0.20.0100.0500
    Nickel−1.00.2900.0200
    Antimony−0.50.09000
    Phosphorus−0.050.00900
    Aluminium−0.00500.0070.036
    Silicon−0.005000
    Measured results (mg/ m 3 ) OEL (TWA, mg/ m 3 ) Initial measurement December 9, 2013 Follow -up measurement February 4, 2014
    Primary operator Assistant operator Primary operator* Assistant operator* Area sample of the melting furnace Area sample of the molding frame
    Lead0.050.0073ND0.00130.03940.03100.0225
    Nickel0.50.0003ND0.00020.00010.0001ND
    Tin20.00360.0002NDNDNDND
    Cooper10.00060.00030.00320.00130.0009ND
    Primary operator Assistant operator
    Blood lead level (μg/dL)
     Initial sampling (Dec. 24, 2013)61.151.7
     1st follow-up sampling (Jan. 16, 2014)63.168.8
     2nd follow-up sampling (Feb. 21, 2014)*40.845.2
     3rd follow-up sampling (Mar. 24, 2014)*39.044.7
     4th follow-up sampling (Apr. 24, 2014)*42.0-†
    Blood analysis (at initial sampling)
     Hemoglobin (g/dL)15.816.3
     Hematocrit (%)46.447.6
     RBC (×103/μL)5.395.56
     WBC (×103/μL)5.6810.09
     Platelet (×103/μL)227245
     Creatinine (mg/dL)10.89
    Urinary analysis (at 1st follow-up sampling)
     Urine lead level (μg/g creatinine)27.57125.6
     β2-microglobulin (mg/day)-0.04
    Blood pressure (at initial sampling)
     Systolic blood pressure (mmHg)130120
     Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg)7090
    Blood cell morphology
     1st follow-up sampling (Jan. 16, 2014)Slight platelet aggregation-
     2nd follow-up sampling (Feb. 21, 2014)*Slight platelet aggregationNormal
     3rd follow-up sampling (Mar. 24, 2014)*NormalNormal
     4th follow-up sampling (Apr. 24, 2014)*Normal-†
    Table 1 Chemical composition of raw materials

    *Bulk sampling refers to the collection of the base material in the workplace and the laboratory analysis of these substances.

    Table 2 Measurements in the work environment

    ND, not detectable; OEL, occupational exposure limit; TWA, time-weighted average.

    *New workers were assigned after the primary operator and his assistant were transferred out of the foundry.

    Table 3 Clinical laboratory results

    *After job reallocation.

    †The assistant operator left the company before the fourth follow-up.


    Ann Occup Environ Med : Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
    Close layer
    TOP