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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Organic waste is a rich substrate for microbial growth, and because of that, workers from waste industry are at higher risk of exposure to bioaerosols. This study aimed to assess fungal
contamination in two plants handling solid waste management. Air samples from the two
plants were collected through an impaction method. Surface samples were also collected by
swabbing surfaces of the same indoor sites. All collected samples were incubated at 27◦C for
5 to 7 d. After lab processing and incubation of collected samples, quantitative and qualitative
results were obtained with identification of the isolated fungal species. Air samples were also
subjected to molecular methods by real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT PCR) using an
impinger method to measure DNA of Aspergillus flavus complex and Stachybotrys chartarum.
Assessment of particulate matter (PM) was also conducted with portable direct-reading equipment.
Particles concentration measurement was performed at five different sizes (PM0.5; PM1;
PM2.5; PM5; PM10). With respect to the waste sorting plant, three species more frequently isolated
in air and surfaces were A. niger (73.9%; 66.1%), A. fumigatus (16%; 13.8%), and A.
flavus (8.7%; 14.2%). In the incineration plant, the most prevalent species detected in air
samples were Penicillium sp. (62.9%), A. fumigatus (18%), and A. flavus (6%), while the most
frequently isolated in surface samples were Penicillium sp. (57.5%), A. fumigatus (22.3%) and
A. niger (12.8%). Stachybotrys chartarum and other toxinogenic strains from A. flavus complex
were not detected. The most common PM sizes obtained were the PM10 and PM5 (inhalable
fraction). Since waste is the main internal fungal source in the analyzed settings, preventive
and protective measures need to be maintained to avoid worker exposure to fungi and their
metabolites.
Description
Keywords
Fungi Solid Waste Management Occupational Exposure Infecções Sistémicas e Zoonoses Saúde Pública Portugal
Pedagogical Context
Citation
J Toxicol Environ Health A. 2014;77(1-3):57-68. doi: 10.1080/15287394.2014.865583
Publisher
Taylor & Francis: STM, Behavioural Science and Public Health Titles
