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Indoor VOC's

Possible Associations Between VOC Concentrations and Worker Health Symptoms

Analysis of CHBS Data Indicates a Possible Association Between Low Level VOC Exposures and Health Symptoms
Field studies have demonstrated that occupants of office buildings are exposed to low concentrations of complex mixtures of VOCs that encompass a number of chemical classes and a broad range of potencies with respect to their potential to cause sensory irritation. It is suspected that irritant symptoms experienced by office workers as part of the "Sick Building Syndrome" or SBS may be related to these exposures in some way. Using data from the CHBS, seven VOC exposure metrics were developed and their ability to predict self-reported SBS irritant symptoms of office workers was tested (Ten Brinke et al., 1998). The term "exposure metric" refers to the measurement and mathematical expression of the potential or actual agent (or combination of agents) that causes an adverse health effect. The VOC metrics were each evaluated in a multivariate logistic regression analysis model that was adjusted for other risk factors of confounders known to affect symptom reporting. One metric developed using principal components (PC) analysis to account for the highly correlated nature of indoor VOC mixtures and the presence of potent, but unmeasured VOCs showed a statistical relationship with some SBS symptoms.

Relative Irritancy and the Development of New VOC Exposure Metrics
A relative irritancy scale for the VOCs measured in the CHBS was first developed. The scale was based on a mouse bioassay (ASTM Standard Test Method E981-84 (2000)) that determines the concentration of an airborne irritant that causes a 50% decrease in the breathing rate of exposed mice (RD50). The RD50 for each VOC of interest was referenced to the RD50 for toluene in Table 3.

This shows, for example, that styrene is about 8 times more potent than toluene and that acetone is about 10 times less potent. A metric, (Ir*VOC)i, was constructed in which the concentrations of the individual VOCs are weighted by their relative irritancies and then summed. All seven VOC exposure metrics are described in Table 4. The underlying assumption is that each of these provides some measure of the irritant potency of a VOC mixture.

Table 4 Definitions of the 7 VOC exposure metrics developed for the Calif. Healthy Building Study.

Metric Symbol Description

TVOC
 
Mass sum of VOCs measured with flame ionization detector
 
SVOCi
 
Sum of individual VOCs quantified by GC/MS
 
S(Ir*VOC)i
 
Sum of irritancy-weighted individual VOCs. Irritancy weighting based on irritancy relative to toluene
 
S(Or*VOC)i
 
Sum of odor-weighted individual VOCs. Odor weighting based on odor relative to toluene
 
Chemical class
 
Concentrations of individual VOCs summed into five chemical classes: Aromatics, Alkanes, Terpenes, Chlorinated, and Oxidized Hydrocarbons
 
AF/CP source vector
 
VOCs preselected based on prior source identification and source strengths, using the indoor/outdoor ratio; principal component vector 4, P(4) produced by principal component analysis (PCA) and identified as due to Air Fresheners and Cleaning Products is used as exposure metric
 
Irritancy/PC VOCs preselected based on relative irritancy scale and prior source identification; sum of two of the principal components produced by PCA, P(3) and P(4) used as exposure metric

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