G. Chester et al., OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE OF SRI-LANKAN TEA PLANTATION WORKERS TO PARAQUAT, Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 71(5), 1993, pp. 625-632
Absorption of the herbicide paraquat (1,1'-dimethyl-4,4-bipyridinium)
by mixer-loaders and spray operators on a Sri Lankan tea plantation wa
s assessed over five consecutive days of spraying. Beginning on the da
y before spraying started and continuing for each of the five spraying
days and for seven days after the last day of spraying, 24-hour urine
samples were collected from each of the workers. Potential dermal exp
osure was assessed during further applications of paraquat on the day
after the last day of urine collection, For this purpose two spraying
replicates were conducted that involved the handling or spraying of an
amount of paraquat equivalent to the maximum used per day in the asse
ssment of absorption. The mixer-loaders and spray operators incurred,
on average, approximately equivalent amounts of potential dermal expos
ure (66 mg and 74 mg paraquat ion, resp.); however, the distribution o
f the exposure differed. About 86% of the total exposure experienced b
y the mixer-loaders was to the hands, whereas about 90% of the exposur
e of the spray operators involved their hands, legs, and feet, in appr
oximately equal proportions. In both cases, 90% or more of the total p
otential exposure involved parts of the body that were normally uncove
red. Despite the evidence of dermal exposure, no paraquat was detected
in the workers' urine. This probably was due to the very low concentr
ation of paraquat in the solutions used for spot spraying on tea plant
ations (0.3-0.4 g paraquat ion per litre), the high standard of person
al hygiene exercised by the workers, and the low permeability of human
skin to paraquat.