1 / 18

Endotoxins: An indoor air and settled dust survey.

Endotoxins: An indoor air and settled dust survey. J. Dobranic, Ph.D.* & S. Cappuccio, B.Sc. EMSL Analytical, Inc. www.emsl.com Tel: 800-220-3675 Email: jdobranic@emsl.com. Introduction. Evaluate and compare fungal contamination in air and surface samples with endotoxin in accumulated dust.

amanda
Télécharger la présentation

Endotoxins: An indoor air and settled dust survey.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Endotoxins: An indoor air and settled dust survey. J. Dobranic, Ph.D.* & S. Cappuccio, B.Sc. EMSL Analytical, Inc. www.emsl.com Tel: 800-220-3675 Email: jdobranic@emsl.com

  2. Introduction • Evaluate and compare fungal contamination in air and surface samples with endotoxin in accumulated dust. • Dust may represent cumulative exposure to endotoxin.

  3. Endotoxin • Pyrogenic, cell wall component (lipopolysaccharide) of Gram-negative bacteria. • Heat-stable

  4. Endotoxin • Elevated airborne concentrations are prevalent in sewage treatment plants • swine operations • cotton textile mills • poultry houses • water damaged buildings

  5. Health Effects • Produces airway inflammation (wheezing) • Associated with increased severity of child and adult asthma • Exposure during childhood may reduce allergic responses later in life • Cause of Humidifier Fever

  6. Materials and Methods • Various fungal samples based on IAQ investigation. • Spore traps and surface samples

  7. Materials & Methods • 12 homes sampled in NJ & PA. • 3 endotoxin samples collected in each dwelling • Kitchen floor, Sofa, Living Room floor, Bedroom floor, Bedroom bed, basement.

  8. Materials & Methods • Specifications: • 0.45µm Polycarbonate Filter • 37mm Styrene Housing • Sterilized by Irradiation • Endotoxin Free • Sift dust through 350 micron sieve • Kinetic Chromogenic Limulus amoebocyte lysate (LAL) assay (EU – endotoxin units)

  9. Horseshoe Crab Harvest

  10. Blood Collection

  11. Results • Surface sample: • 9 out of 12 homes had visible mould growth inside (Aspergillus, Chaetomium, Penicillium, and Stachybotrys) • Spore traps: • 8 out of 12 had > indoor spore counts vs outdoors

  12. Results • Endotoxin: • Mouldy: 0.1-263.6 EU/mg dust • Non-Mouldy: 0.5-38.5 EU/mg dust • Published range is 11-100 EU/mg dust

  13. Results

  14. Results

  15. Conclusions • Mouldiness in homes was not a good predictor of endotoxin levels. • Similar conclusion in published studies comparing endotoxin in air with mouldiness. • Suspicion of GNB contamination requires directed endotoxin testing.

  16. Endotoxin Predictors in Literature • Positively correlated with presence of a dog or past presence of a dog. • Positively correlated with use of a cool-mist humidifier • Negatively correlated with use of a dehumidifier.

  17. Acknowledgements • Marc Leftwich and Bob Woodward at AMT Mold Testing in PA. • EMSL’s clients for participation.

  18. Contact Information • Jason Dobranic, Ph.D. • EMSL Analytical, Inc. • 107 Haddon Ave. Westmont, NJ 08108 • Tel: 800-220-3675 • Email: jdobranic@emsl.com

More Related