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Industrial hygiene skin notation

The toxicity of a substance is its capacity to cause injury once inside the body. The main modes of entry into the body by chemicals in industry are inhalation, ingestion and absorption through the skin. Gases, vapours, mists, dusts, fumes and aerosols can be inhaled and they can also affect the skin, eyes and mucous membranes. Ingestion is rare although possible as a result of poor personal hygiene, subconscious hand-to-mouth contact, or accidents. The skin can be affected directly by contact with the chemicals, even when intact, but its permeability to certain substances also offers a route into the body. Chemicals accorded a skin notation in the list of Occupational Exposure Limits (see Table 5.12) are listed in Table 5.2. Exposure may also arise via skin lesions. [Pg.67]

In the national occupational hygiene standards, several of the industrial solvents have notations for skin absorption. In the recent Swedish standard... [Pg.685]


See other pages where Industrial hygiene skin notation is mentioned: [Pg.1253]    [Pg.1256]    [Pg.1253]    [Pg.1256]    [Pg.725]    [Pg.472]    [Pg.475]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.179 ]




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Skin notation

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