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Chronic Arsenic Poisoning and Respiratory Effects in Bangladesh
Author(s) -
Milton Abul Hasnat,
Hasan Ziul,
Rahman Atiqur,
Rahman Mahfuzar
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of occupational health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.664
H-Index - 59
ISSN - 1348-9585
DOI - 10.1539/joh.43.136
Subject(s) - medicine , arsenic , arsenic poisoning , chronic bronchitis , environmental health , population , arsenic contamination of groundwater , arsenic toxicity , hygiene , respiratory system , toxicology , toxicity , pathology , biology , metallurgy , materials science
Chronic Arsenic Poisoning and Respiratory Effects in Bangladesh: Abul Hasnat Milton, et al. Arsenic Cell, NGO Forum for Drinking Water Supply & Sanitation, Bangladesh —A large population in Bangladesh have been exposed to naturally occurring inorganic arsenic through their drinking water. A prevalence comparison study of respiratory disorders among subjects with and without arsenic exposure through drinking water was conducted in Bangladesh. Characteristic skin lesions, keratoses and pigmentation alteration, and the water arsenic level confirmed the arsenic exposure. Three villages were selected from health awareness campaign programs. Participants in these courtyard meetings who had suspected skin lesions, i.e., keratosis, hyperpigmentation and hypopigmentation, were examined by a well‐trained medical officer to confirm the diagnosis. Unexposed subjects were randomly selected from another village, where tubewells were not contaminated with arsenic. We interviewed and examined 218 individuals irrespective of age and sex from these villages. The arsenic level in their drinking water was measured and the mean arsenic level was 614μ/l(ranging from 136μg/l to 1,000μg/l). Information regarding respiratory system signs and symptoms was also collected. There were few smokers, and analyses were therefore confined to nonsmokers. The overall crude prevalence (or risk) among the exposed subjects for chronic cough, and chronic bronchitis, was three times the prevalence in the control population. Age was a slightly negative confounding factor. The crude prevalence ratios were noticeably increased for female participants compared to male participants. A possible explanation for this noticeably increased occurrence of respiratory signs and symptoms in women is related to the presence of weakness. These results add to the evidence that long‐term ingestion of arsenic can cause respiratory problems especially among females.

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