Article

Neurological deficits in solvent-exposed painters: A syndrome including impaired colour vision, cognitive defects, tremors and loss of vibration sensation

Details

Citation

Semple S, Dick F, Chen R & Seaton A (2000) Neurological deficits in solvent-exposed painters: A syndrome including impaired colour vision, cognitive defects, tremors and loss of vibration sensation. QJM - Monthly Journal of the Association of Physicians, 93 (10), pp. 655-661. https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/93.10.655

Abstract
Five individuals are described who had participated in a study of former dockyard painters. All had worked between 16 years and 45 years as industrial painters, much of the time inside ships. All underwent structured neurological examination, colour vision testing (allowing calculation of a colour confusion index corrected for age and alcohol), and detailed psychometric testing. An occupational history sufficient to allow estimation of past exposure to solvents was taken. All gave a history of exposure to high concentrations of solvents at work, and several described episodes of acute narcosis. All showed neurological deficits and some had overt neurological disease, although in no case had this previously been linked to their work. The most striking features, sufficient to constitute a syndrome, were acquired blue-yellow colour vision deficits, coarse tremor, impaired vibration sensation in the legs and cognitive impairment. Their estimated cumulative exposures to solvents ranged between the equivalent of 13 and 37 calendar years working at the Occupational Exposure Standard concentration (OES years). This study for the first time gives an indication of the concentrations of solvents likely to lead to serious neurological disease in humans. It serves as a reminder to physicians to take an occupational history from patients with obscure neurological or psychological impairment.

Journal
QJM - Monthly Journal of the Association of Physicians: Volume 93, Issue 10

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2000
ISSN1460-2725

People (1)

People

Professor Sean Semple

Professor Sean Semple

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing