Effects of occupational exposure to noise and ototoxic chemicals on hearing

Objectives Occupational noise exposure is one of the most common risk factors of irreversible sensorineural hearing loss. With noise exposure, recent studies have introduced ototoxic effect of non-noise source industrial chemical exposures. This study aimed to evaluate hazardous effects of occupatio...

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Published inOccupational and environmental medicine (London, England) Vol. 68; no. Suppl 1; p. A101
Main Authors Kim, Kyusang, Choi, Yoon-Hyeong, Kim, Daysung, Cho, Yoonho, Kim, Jinhwang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 01.09.2011
BMJ Publishing Group LTD
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Summary:Objectives Occupational noise exposure is one of the most common risk factors of irreversible sensorineural hearing loss. With noise exposure, recent studies have introduced ototoxic effect of non-noise source industrial chemical exposures. This study aimed to evaluate hazardous effects of occupational noise across various exposure levels, additionally in combination with ototoxic chemicals exposure, on hearing disability among workers in Korea. Methods We examined 79,221 employees in 2,770 industries from national health surveillance 2009 on occupational audiological disorders collected by Korea Ministry of Labor. Air-conduction hearing thresholds were computed as a pure-tone average (PTA) of 2, 3, 4 kHz. Occupational noise exposures were measured for every industry. Occupational non-noise exposures (eg heavy metals, organics) were controlled as exposure vs. non-exposure. Results After controlling for potential confounding factors, 10dB increase in occupational noise was associated with a 0.57dB (95% Confidence Interval; 0.41-0.73) elevation of PTA. We found a statistically significant interaction between occupational noise exposure and occupational ototoxic chemicals exposures on PTA (p for interaction with heavy metals <0.0001, organics=0.0475). Conclusions Our findings provide the evidence for the association between occupational noise exposure and hearing disability from on-site measurement data across various occupations/industries. This study also suggests that occupational chemical exposures increase the risk of hearing loss, and their ototoxic effects should be considered for establishing the occupational environment monitoring and management plan.
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ArticleID:oemed-2011-100382.335
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ISSN:1351-0711
1470-7926
DOI:10.1136/oemed-2011-100382.335