• [ 2 ] Although many people have also included Riehl melanosis within the aforementioned categories of acquired pigmentary disorders, in 2018 the international pigmentary consensus meetings determined that Riehl melanosis is better classified as a separate entity because the clinical presentation slightly differs and it is hypothesized to arise as a result of contact dermatitis. (medscape.com)
  • Later, Hoffmann and Habermann described a condition referred to as melanodermatitis toxica and hypothesized that it may represent a type of contact dermatitis associated with the use of certain oils and hydrocarbons. (medscape.com)
  • In the first study, patch testing identified aniline dye (orange II) present in facial powder as the cause of the pigmented contact dermatitis, whereas the second study emphasized that photosensitizing may play an addition role in the pigmentation. (medscape.com)
  • In 1970, Osmundsen subsequently reported 7 patients who had a similar bizarre hyperpigmentation that occurred as a result of contact dermatitis to an optical whitener, Tinopal CH 3566, in washing powder and called the condition pigmented contact dermatitis (PCD). (medscape.com)
  • The annual incidence of occupational contact dermatitis using data from both schemes was 12·9 per 100,000 workers. (cdc.gov)
  • For men, high rates of contact dermatitis were seen in reports from both schemes for chemical operatives, machine tool setters and operatives, coach and spray painters and metal workers. (cdc.gov)
  • Golara Honari, MD, a specialist in eczematous dermatoses including contact dermatitis atopic dermatitis, and occupational dermatoses. (stanford.edu)
  • While at the Cleveland Clinic, she also completed a Fellowship in Contact Dermatitis and Environmental Dermatology. (stanford.edu)
  • Dr. Honari is currently a member of the Board of Directors at the American Contact Dermatitis Society and serves as a mentor at the International Society of Dermatology in the arena of Contact Dermatitis. (stanford.edu)
  • Her research is in the fields of contact dermatitis, atopic dermatitis, and cutaneous and systemic hypersensitivity reactions. (stanford.edu)
  • Allergic contact dermatitis is a common clinical problem seen in our dermatology outpatient clinics, comprising 0.5% of patients seen in 1999. (annals.edu.sg)
  • Trends in the incidence of occupational asthma, contact dermatitis, noise-induced hearing loss, carpal tunnel syndrome and upper limb musculoskeletal disorders in European countries from 2000 to 2012. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • The epidemiology of occupational contact dermatitis. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • Incidence of occupational contact dermatitis in healthcare workers: a systematic review. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • ABSTRACT Allergic contact dermatitis to cement is a delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction in which cytokines interferon-gamma (IFN-) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) may be involved in persisting erythema and oedema. (who.int)
  • VEGF and IFN- levels in serum and skin lesions were measured in 32 Egyptian building workers with chronic allergic contact dermatitis due to occupational exposure to cement and 20 healthy controls. (who.int)
  • VEGF and IFN- may play a role in the pathogenesis of cement allergic contact dermatitis. (who.int)
  • Special interests are Medical, Paediatric and (Contact Dermatitis) Occupational Dermatology. (co.tt)
  • Phototoxic , urticaria and contact dermatitis . (dermnetnz.org)
  • Cardullo AC, Ruszkowski AM, DeLeo VA. Allergic contact dermatitis resulting from sensitivity to citrus peel, geraniol, and citral. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Rudzki E, Rapiejko P, Rebandel P. Occupational contact dermatitis, with asthma and rhinitis , from camomile in a cosmetician also with contact urticaria from both camomile and lime flowers. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Objective: To determine the yield of the oil and cooling fluid series from Chemotechnique Diagnostics in patients in Israel who are suspected to have occupational allergic contact dermatitis. (tau.ac.il)
  • Methods: The authors reviewed the findings in 175 patients with suspected occupational contact dermatitis who worked with oil and cooling fluids and were patch-tested at two dermatologic clinics in Israel from 1999 to 2003. (tau.ac.il)
  • The findings indicate that this series serves as an appropriate test for evaluating occupational contact dermatitis and that its composition should not be changed, pending further studies. (tau.ac.il)
  • Employees may suffer dermal hazards in working with wet cement such as cement burns (due to its caustic nature) and inflammation of the skin (either due to irritant or allergic contact dermatitis). (osha.gov)
  • Spiewak R , Grubska-Suchanek E, Pasnicki M, Krakowski A, Cisowska A. Contact allergy and allergic contact dermatitis in children and adolescents with chronic eczema. (radoslawspiewak.net)
  • Spiewak R , Moed H, von Blomberg BM, Bruynzeel D, Scheper R, Gibbs S, Rustemeyer T. Laboratory diagnosis of allergic contact dermatitis to nickel: The benefits of combining the highly sensitive ELISPOT assay with modified cell culture conditions. (radoslawspiewak.net)
  • Her memberships include the Canadian Medical Association, Canadian Dermatology Association, American Dermatology Association and American Contact Dermatitis Society. (zoomerradio.ca)
  • A leading expert in Allergic Skin Disease, she is one of a handful of dermatologists in Canada with a sub-specialty interest in Allergic Contact Dermatitis and Patch or Allergy Skin Testing. (zoomerradio.ca)
  • contact dermatitis, musculoskeletal and asthma, respectively. (qxmd.com)
  • Despite the patient's insistence to the contrary, the cause of her eruption was an airborne allergic contact dermatitis to chemicals she was exposed to during her longtime hobby of soap-making. (jcadonline.com)
  • The patient was patch tested with a modified North American Contact Dermatitis Group (NACDG) standard series (based on her exposures) in addition to serial dilutions of hydroxychloroquine, gold thiosulfate, gold maleate, and her personal hygiene products, including the products she used in the manufacturing of her homemade soaps. (jcadonline.com)
  • Due to the areas affected, namely the face, neck, and arms, allergic contact dermatitis (ACD) to personal hygiene products (cosmetics, fragrances, and lotions) can mimic photosensitivity. (jcadonline.com)
  • Airborne contact dermatitis occurs mostly from plants and chemicals encountered in the occupational setting, and the offending chemicals and routes of exposure vary tremendously. (jcadonline.com)
  • Background Contact dermatitis (CD) is a frequently occurring medical condition, for which Vinca minor (VM) is one of the recommended homeopathic medicines. (thieme-connect.de)
  • Contact dermatitis (CD) is a pathological entity for which occupational exposure can be presented to be a primary cause or contributory element. (thieme-connect.de)
  • Allergic contact dermatitis. (medecinesciences.org)
  • The diagnostic evaluation, treatment, and prevention of allergic contact dermatitis in the new millennium. (medecinesciences.org)
  • Effector and regulatory T cells in allergic contact dermatitis. (medecinesciences.org)
  • Plant-induced contact dermatitis is divided into 5 major categories. (medscape.com)
  • Plant products cause a variety of adverse cutaneous effects, and they are responsible for most cases of allergic contact dermatitis. (medscape.com)
  • In the United States, most cases of allergic contact dermatitis are due to Toxicodendron plants. (medscape.com)
  • This discussion of clinical manifestations and treatment options is a supplement to the material presented in Allergic Contact Dermatitis . (medscape.com)
  • Allergic contact dermatitis requires exposure and sensitization to the causative plant products. (medscape.com)
  • Allergic contact dermatitis due to poison ivy can occur in persons of any age, though infants and elderly individuals are reportedly less susceptible to poison ivy. (medscape.com)
  • Members of the family Anacardiaceae cause more cases of allergic contact dermatitis than those of all other plant families combined. (medscape.com)
  • 27 workers(8.7%) experienced absence due to contact dermatitis related to occupation. (jpmph.org)
  • From the data at Sanglah Hospital in Dermatology Department, it should be noted that there is increasing number of new cases of contact dermatitis in period of January 2000 until December 2005, from 10,16% until 13,36% in the next year and relatively stable in the next four years. (harianregional.com)
  • It has subsequently been used to characterize these associations for many other health outcomes, including breast cancer in both men and women, asthma, contact dermatitis, and silicosis. (occupationalcancer.ca)
  • More rarely, cutaneous irritating outbreaks have been observed and allergic contact permanent dermatitis. (wikipedia.org)
  • At St. Michael's she is a member of the Occupational Disease Specialty Program ODSP, and is responsible for seeing complex Allergic and Occupational skin diseases. (zoomerradio.ca)
  • She is also a member of CREOD, the Centre for Research Expertise in Occupational Disease, and has published articles on different aspects of Allergic Skin Disease. (zoomerradio.ca)
  • Occupational exposure to fibrous glass. (cdc.gov)
  • However, with multiple different measurement metrics in use, comparison of isocyanate exposure data between studies and development of occupational exposure limits (OELs) for polyisocyanates is difficult. (cdc.gov)
  • Exposure to the peel oil of the Tahiti lime may cause dermatitis. (dermnetnz.org)
  • The risk of acquiring plant-related dermatitis is influenced by host susceptibility and exposure. (medscape.com)
  • During a review of occupational exposures evaluated in symptoms depend on the route of exposure. (cdc.gov)
  • Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B obtained from both that research facility's medical records washed the site with soap and water for 15 seconds and and occupational exposure reports, were reviewed to sum- rinsed the soap from her hands. (cdc.gov)
  • Any exposure to pesticides, including residential, para-occupational and domestic, was associated with respiratory disease and chronic respiratory symptoms (chronic phlegm, chronic wheezing, ever wheezing), except for chronic cough. (ersjournals.com)
  • Occupational exposure to PC is underestimated in outdoor workers and especially in forestry workers (FW) and is globally diffusing because of rising temperatures. (biomedcentral.com)
  • This is the first report of hypersensitivity reactions in SI FW due to occupational exposure to PC. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Further screenings not only in FW but also in other populations of outdoor workers are needed in order to assess the real incidence of contact and airborne reactions due to occupational exposure to PC. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Occupational exposure to PC has been reported even if in forestry workers (FW) it is underestimated. (biomedcentral.com)
  • During the annual scheduled examination of a population of 630 FW in the Mountains of north-eastern Sicily, the occupational health physician asked the workers to report if they had ever experienced a reaction after exposure to PC. (biomedcentral.com)
  • New settings for occupational exposure to respirable crystalline silica continue to emerge. (cdc.gov)
  • A native of Iran, Dr. Honari earned her medical degree from Iran's University of Medical Sciences in 1999 and completed her residencies in Internal Medicine and Dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic. (stanford.edu)
  • House Officer Internal Medicine and Dermatology, Port of Spain General Hospital, 1999-2000. (co.tt)
  • She is a Diplomat of the American Board of Dermatology and is an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto, Department of Medicine in the Divisions of Dermatology and Occupational Health. (zoomerradio.ca)
  • Active in research and education, Dr. Skotnicki has been teaching University of Toronto Dermatology, Allergy and Family Medicine residents at her St. Michael's Hospital clinic since 1999. (zoomerradio.ca)
  • An observational, prospective, patient-outcome study was conducted in five different practice settings on 390 CD patients over 18 months using three outcomes-Glasgow Homeopathic Hospital Outcome Scale (GHHOS), Scoring Atopic Dermatitis (SCORAD), and Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI), assessed at baseline, after 3 and 6 months. (thieme-connect.de)
  • Occupational asthma is the most common occupational respiratory disease in the United Kingdom and also in Singapore. (annals.edu.sg)
  • Occupational asthma has become a common work related respiratory disorder in the industrialised world. (bmj.com)
  • 1 Blanc and Toren have shown that 9% of cases of adult asthma-including principally new onset asthma and, much more rarely, reactivation of pre-existing asthma-are attributable to occupational factors. (bmj.com)
  • 3 From a practical point of view, addressing past and present occupational factors should be a priority in the assessment of adult onset asthma. (bmj.com)
  • In most cases, occupational exposures induce new onset asthma in a healthy subject, or workplace exposures may reactivate asthma in individuals who have been asymptomatic for years, or may aggravate pre-existing asthma. (bmj.com)
  • To date, more than 250 agents capable of causing occupational asthma have been reported. (bmj.com)
  • 1 Occupational asthma continues to be the most reported respiratory disease, although its incidence is lower than in previous years, with an estimated 822 cases (27% of total cases). (bmj.com)
  • In 1997, incidence rates of occupational asthma were highest among workers in the manufacture of wood products, textiles, and food (particularly grain products and crustaceans), in the production of precious and non-ferrous metals, rubber goods, detergents and perfumes, and in mining. (bmj.com)
  • 7 This system has led to reports of previously unrecognised causes of occupational asthma. (bmj.com)
  • Under reporting of occupational asthma may be more common among women, since the risk of asthma attributable to occupational exposures among women was higher than expected. (bmj.com)
  • Occupational asthma can be suspected as the cause of asthma in 5-15% of asthmatic subjects. (bmj.com)
  • Occupational diseases reported to the Italian National Insurance for Occupational Diseases (INAIL) in industrial and services sectors from 2006 to 2019 were considered and analyzed. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • The incidence of occupational diseases in the industrial and services sectors in 2019 was 261 cases for 100,000 workers, with musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) representing 65% of the total cases, their incidence being 169.5 cases per 100,000 workers. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • During the study period, occupational diseases increased in Italy, mainly for MSDs, due to a changeover in eligibility criteria from 2008. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • More efforts are needed to harmonize the legislation for joint action in the prevention and recognition of occupational diseases. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • 2. EUROSTAT Why do we need the European Occupational Diseases Statistics (EODS)? (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • 3. Van Der Molen HF, Marsili C, Vitali A, Colosio C. Trends in occupational diseases in the Italian agricultural sector, 2004-2017. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • Annual incidence of occupational diseases in economic sectors in the Netherlands. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • 13. Szeszenia-Dabrowska N, Szymczak W Incidence of occupational diseases in Poland. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • 14. Wilczyńska U, Sobala W, Szeszenia-Dabrowska N. [Occupational diseases in Poland, 2012] Med Pr. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • 15. Jarolímek J, Urban P. Twenty-year development of occupational diseases in the Czech Republic: medical and geographical aspects. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • Dermatitis/ Eczemas, acne and diseases of the hair were the most common disorders in our series of patients, while the incidence of vitiligo, psoriasis and skin tumors was comparatively less. (edoj.org.eg)
  • Since 1989, the SWORD (surveillance of work related and occupational respiratory disease) project has provided a consistent and reliable estimate of the incidence and pattern of occupational respiratory diseases in the UK. (bmj.com)
  • 6 In the USA, in 1987 the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health instituted SENSOR (sentinel event notification system for occupational risks), with the aim to identify and characterise new case reports of targeted occupational diseases. (bmj.com)
  • Occupational skin diseases are a widespread problem. (harianregional.com)
  • As a result, many workers in different occupations suffer from occupational skin diseases. (harianregional.com)
  • The Occupational Disease Surveillance System was created to address these limitations and generates statistical information to characterize the associations between hundreds of different jobs and cancers and non-malignant diseases. (occupationalcancer.ca)
  • Electronic Library of Construction Occupational Safety & Health (elcosh), (2000). (osha.gov)
  • Zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB) models were fitted to three THOR work-related ill health surveillance schemes Occupational Skin Disease Surveillance (437 reporters between 1996 and 2019), Occupational Physicians Reporting Activity (1094 between 1996 and 2019) and Surveillance of Work-Related and Occupational Respiratory Disease (878 between 1999 and 2019). (qxmd.com)
  • I'm interested in a better understanding of the clinical and molecular mechanisms of eczematous dermatoses and the effects of environmental and occupational exposures on the skin. (stanford.edu)
  • A significant positive correlation was found between tissue VEGF and the eczema area and severity index (EASI) score in dermatitis patients ( r = 0.86). (who.int)
  • reporting by occupational physicians to the scheme began in May 1994 and was superseded in January 1996 by OPRA (Occupational Physicians Reporting Activity). (cdc.gov)
  • 2,3] Because the chemicals in cosmetics tend to cause a chronic eczematous dermatitis rather than an acute vesicular eruption[4] and the fact that more than half of reported cases of cosmetic ACD involve the face and periocular area,[5,6] making the distinction between ACD and photodrug reactions can be difficult. (jcadonline.com)
  • However, no superiority of a ceramide cream over an ordinary petrolatum emollient was observed in patients with chronic hand dermatitis (8) or in experimentally irritated skin (9). (medicaljournals.se)
  • We found that many workers had skin disease related to occupation and characteristics of occupational skin disease were chronic and clustering. (jpmph.org)
  • 0119". National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). (wikipedia.org)
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Publication No. 84-103, (June 1984). (osha.gov)
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Publication No. 94-103, (January 1994). (osha.gov)
  • During the recent National Occupational Research Agenda (NORA) Symposium, NIOSH had the pleasure of recognizing exemplary partners and researchers in the field of occupational safety and health research. (cdc.gov)
  • The NIOSH Director's Award is presented, beginning this year, for outstanding leadership and research accomplishments in the field of occupational safety and health that have a measurable impact on the practitioner environment and workplace. (cdc.gov)
  • Effective silicosis prevention strategies for employers are available from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and NIOSH. (cdc.gov)
  • Požadavky na zkoušení a značení filtračních polomasek dle jednotlivých tříd stanovuje norma ČSN EN 149+A1 (zkráceně EN 149), která je českou verzí evropské normy EN 149:2001+A1:2009. (wikipedia.org)
  • Atmospheric analysis, occupational safety and health. (cdc.gov)
  • Occupational health has been aptly described as a two-way relationship between work and health. (annals.edu.sg)
  • Division of Applied Research and Technology, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, Ohio nates, and the unit of measurement. (cdc.gov)
  • Helps businesses (especially small businesses) identify and understand common occupational safety and health hazards in their work place. (osha.gov)
  • Notable human health toxicity effects identified from human and/or animal studies include respiratory cancer, non-cancer toxicity effects following inhalation, dermatitis, and reproductive effects. (mdpi.com)
  • Trends in occupational disease incidence are estimated in voluntary reporting schemes such as The Health and Occupational Reporting (THOR) Network in the UK. (qxmd.com)
  • The NORA Innovative Research Award for Worker Safety and Health honors those who have shown creativity and innovation in their occupational safety and health research in a NORA priority area. (cdc.gov)
  • The NORA Partnering Award for Worker Safety and Health honors groups who have demonstrated exemplary teamwork, innovative thinking, and strong science in their collaborative partnerships on occupational safety and health research. (cdc.gov)
  • These cases were identified by the occupational health physician during the annual screening of FW working in the Mountains of north-eastern Sicily. (biomedcentral.com)
  • His faith in workers irked many in official health and safety agencies and the occupational medicine establishment, but then it was an approach that frequently exposed their failings. (hazards.org)
  • It also gave him the income that allowed him to pursue a new vocation, a form of grassroots occupational health service operating in communities where it was accepted that work could and frequently did kill. (hazards.org)
  • Scarcely any workers had access to occupational health services, and those that had frequently found a visit to the company doctor could be a prelude to the sack. (hazards.org)
  • Setting up shop first in working men's clubs and then in GPs' waiting rooms in Sheffield, these pairings of blue-collar and white-coat occupational health workers would kick off conversations about conditions at work. (hazards.org)
  • Thanks to sympathetic GPs, the approach attracted official health service support, leading to the creation of Sheffield Occupational Health Project. (hazards.org)
  • All were powerful instruments in the hands of a new breed of occupational health worker who could tell you not only that you were cloth-eared and wheezing, but why you were and what to do about it. (hazards.org)
  • Mosques and community centres were turned into makeshift clinics, run in conjunction with local Pakistani, Yemeni and Afro-Caribbean groups, uncovering an expected but previously unquantified or officially addressed racial inequality in occupational health. (hazards.org)
  • METHODS: We collected and analyzed the cases of occupational skin disease reported by surveillance system composed of doctors and nurses in 150 enterprises with dispensary or attached hospital and physicians in 92 specific health examination institutes and 150 dermatologists from May to November, 1998. (jpmph.org)
  • RESULTS: Among members of surveillance system, 66 enterprises and 47 specific health examination institutes and 55 dermatologists reported 571 cases of occupational skin disease in 512 workers. (jpmph.org)
  • These workers were linked to the Ontario Cancer Registry (1964-2016), and a subset were subsequently linked to the Ontario Health Insurance Plans eClaims database (1999-2016), the Canadian Institute for Health Information's Discharge Abstract Database (2006-2016) and the National Ambulatory Care Registry (2006-2016). (occupationalcancer.ca)
  • An occupational health program that incorporates these elements was developed by the National Industrial Sand Association (NISA) and I recommend it for your consideration. (cdc.gov)
  • During the 6 years to January 1999 a total of 12,574 new cases of occupational skin disease was estimated from reports by consultant dermatologists and 10,136 cases estimated from occupational physicians (since May 1994). (cdc.gov)
  • Eruptions in an exposed distribution mimicking photodistributed dermatitis may also be the result of airborne substances-in this case, the fumes produced from the patient's soap-making practices. (jcadonline.com)
  • Sharps/needlestick injuries are a common occupational hazard among healthcare workers (HCWs). (annals.edu.sg)
  • Dermatitis among workers in Ontario: results from the Occupational Disease Surveillance System. (mattioli1885journals.com)
  • Children of pesticide workers may be exposed through occupational sources (storing working equipment in the house, contamination of clothes, etc .) 9 - 12 . (ersjournals.com)
  • This system serves as a model for other jurisdictions, and for a national approach to occupational disease surveillance, with the ultimate goal of reducing risks among workers through improved risk reduction and prevention. (occupationalcancer.ca)
  • Careful physical examination of the patient revealed eczematous, scaly, red, coalescing papules and plaques involving the entire anterior neck, including the submandibular area-an area that would normally be protected by anatomy in photo-distributed dermatitis. (jcadonline.com)
  • Jack Ferro has practised at Crown Office Chambers since 1999, focusing on personal injury, clinical negligence, product liability and industrial disease. (crownofficechambers.com)
  • This novel linkage approach identifies existing and emerging trends in occupational disease in Ontario, and can provide evidence to inform screening programs, clinical approaches, compensation policies, regulations, and risk reduction initiatives by employers, government agencies, and other stakeholders. (occupationalcancer.ca)
  • Silicosis is a potentially fatal but preventable occupational lung disease caused by inhaling respirable particles containing crystalline silicon dioxide (silica). (cdc.gov)
  • Surveillance of occupational skin disease: EPIDERM and OPRA. (cdc.gov)
  • Characteristics of Occupational Skin Disease Reported by Surveillance System. (jpmph.org)
  • CONCLUSIONS: This is the first study using nationwide surveillance system to collect data of occupational skin disease. (jpmph.org)
  • Therefore, we had to establish counterplan to manage occupational skin disease and to operate surveillance system to identify trends of occupational skin disease, continuously. (jpmph.org)
  • Currently 244 dermatologists and 790 occupational physicians report incident cases to these schemes. (cdc.gov)
  • 2 Studies that have used information collected during military service suggest that occupational factors explain 25% of apparently new cases. (bmj.com)
  • Post basic Diploma leading slightly from building to in Physiotherapy and Occupational genetic information encoding the welfare schemes and to spun off in 1999. (startupdentalclinic.com)