dinitrobenzenes and Coronary-Disease

dinitrobenzenes has been researched along with Coronary-Disease* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for dinitrobenzenes and Coronary-Disease

ArticleYear
Cardiovascular mortality among munitions workers exposed to nitroglycerin and dinitrotoluene.
    Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health, 1992, Volume: 18, Issue:1

    A retrospective cohort mortality study with 5529 nitroglycerin, 4989 dinitrotoluene, and 5136 unexposed workers compared the mortality of the exposed groups with that of the United States population and that of the unexposed group with life-table analysis and Poisson regression. Mortality from ischemic heart disease was close to that expected, and mortality from cerebrovascular disease was slightly less than that expected, for the workers with both nitroglycerin and dinitrotoluene exposure and for those with dinitrotoluene exposure only. A significant interaction between age and nitroglycerin exposure was detected in the Poisson regression analyses for ischemic heart disease, particularly for workers actively exposed to nitroglycerin. The rate ratio for the workers under 45 years of age and actively exposed to nitroglycerin was 3.30 (95% confidence interval 129-8.48). This study did not show a chronic effect of nitroglycerin or dinitrotoluene exposure on cardiovascular disease risk. Potential biases related to the company's medical screening program may have limited the ability to detect chronic cardiovascular effects.

    Topics: Adult; Cardiovascular Diseases; Cause of Death; Cerebrovascular Disorders; Cohort Studies; Coronary Disease; Dinitrobenzenes; Humans; Male; Nitroglycerin; Occupational Exposure; Retrospective Studies

1992
Heart disease in workers exposed to dinitrotoluene.
    Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association, 1986, Volume: 28, Issue:9

    To determine whether the carcinogenicity of dinitrotoluene (DNT) in rodent bioassays was predictive for humans, we examined the mortality experience of exposed workers at two ammunition plants. Cohorts of 156 and 301 men who had worked a month or more during the 1940s and 1950s at jobs with opportunity for substantial DNT exposure were followed through the end of 1980. Numbers of expected deaths and standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) were computed, using mortality rates of US white males as the standard. No evidence of a carcinogenic effect was found, but unsuspected excesses of mortality from ischemic heart disease were noted at both plants (SMRs) 131 and 143; 95% confidence limits 65 to 234 and 107 to 187, respectively). Deaths from ischemic heart disease remained high even when compared with expected numbers derived using mortality rates of the counties in which the plants were located. Additional analyses revealed evidence of a 15-year latent period and suggested a relationship with duration and intensity of exposure. Epidemiologic investigations of other heavily exposed populations are needed to confirm the etiologic significance of the association between DNT and heart disease described here.

    Topics: Coronary Disease; Dinitrobenzenes; Environmental Exposure; Heart Diseases; Humans; Illinois; Male; Middle Aged; Nitrobenzenes; Time Factors; Virginia

1986