Infrared radiation and cataract.

Acta ophthalmologica. Supplementum Pub Date : 1984-01-01
E Lydahl
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Abstract

The study was undertaken to determine if occupational exposure to infrared (IR) radiation increases the risk of developing cataract. The study includes epidemiologic investigations of two groups of workers exposed to IR radiation and two groups of non IR-exposed controls. The first investigation included 208 iron and steel workers and 208 controls. For each of the workers, the lifetime IR-exposure was calculated with the help of occupational interviews and measurements of the IR-exposure to their eyes in their jobs. Eye examinations including a detailed slit lamp examination of the lens were made. Exposed persons and controls were examined randomly. Wedge shaped opacities, a common type of senile lens opacity, were found in 32% of IR-exposed workers 60 years and older and in 12% of controls of the same age. In younger age groups there was no significant difference between exposed and controls regarding the presence of lens opacities. The second investigation included 209 IR-exposed glass workers and 298 controls. Workers over 50 years of age and with at least 20 years of occupational IR-exposure were included. Special care was taken to include retired workers. Exposure determinations and ophthalmological examinations were made in the same way as in the first study. The eye examinations of the glass workers showed that 16% of glass workers over 70 years of age had been operated for cataract compared to 1% of controls of the same age. In neither of the two studies was it possible to detect a dose-effect correlation. The exposure measurements showed that the maximal doses in both the iron and the glass industry are about the same. There are, however, a large number of jobs in the iron and steel industry that give low doses while most jobs in the glass works give high exposures. Cataract was found to be more common in the left than in the right eye. Measurements of the exposure to the two eyes separately also showed that the left eye in some working moments is exposed to higher irradiances than the right. A family history of cataract was found to increase the risk for the development of cataract in glass workers.

红外线辐射和白内障。
这项研究是为了确定职业接触红外线(IR)辐射是否会增加患白内障的风险。这项研究包括对两组暴露于红外辐射的工人和两组未暴露于红外辐射的对照者进行流行病学调查。第一次调查包括208名钢铁工人和208名对照者。对每个工人来说,一生的红外辐射暴露是通过职业访谈和他们在工作中眼睛的红外辐射暴露测量来计算的。眼科检查包括对晶状体进行详细的裂隙灯检查。随机检查暴露者和对照组。楔形混浊是一种常见的老年性晶状体混浊,在60岁及以上的暴露于红外辐射的工人中有32%的人发现,在同年龄的对照组中有12%的人发现。在较年轻的年龄组中,暴露组和对照组在晶状体混浊方面没有显著差异。第二次调查包括209名接触红外辐射的玻璃工人和298名对照者。年龄超过50岁且至少有20年职业辐射暴露的工人被包括在内。退休工人也受到了特别照顾。暴露测定和眼科检查的方法与第一次研究相同。对玻璃工人的眼科检查显示,70岁以上的玻璃工人中有16%做过白内障手术,而同龄的对照组只有1%。在这两项研究中都不可能检测到剂量效应相关性。暴露测量表明,铁工业和玻璃工业的最大剂量大致相同。然而,钢铁工业中有大量的工作是低剂量的,而玻璃工厂的大多数工作是高剂量的。白内障在左眼比右眼更常见。分别测量两只眼睛的辐照度也表明,在某些工作时刻,左眼比右眼暴露在更高的辐照度下。有白内障家族史的玻璃工人患白内障的风险增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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