Gram-negative bacteria associated with timber as a potential respiratory hazard for woodworkers |
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Authors: | Zofia Pra?mo Jacek Dutkiewicz Gra?yna Cholewa |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Occupational Biohazards, Institute of Agricultural Medicine, Jaczewskiego 2, PL-20-090 Lublin, Poland (author for correspondence: Fax:;(2) Department of Occupational Biohazards, Institute of Agricultural Medicine, Jaczewskiego 2, PL-20-090 Lublin, Poland |
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Abstract: | The concentration and species composition of viableGram-negative bacteria was determined in samples of coniferous wood (Scots pine) and deciduous wood (European beech), and in air samples taken during the processing of these woods in sawmills. The concentration of Gram-negative bacteria in the sapwood of pine logs ranged from 1.0 × 101 to 6.2 × 104 CFU/g. Their concentration in the air of the pine processing sawmill was within a range of 1.0 × 102–6.3 × 102 CFU/m3. Concentration of Gram-negative bacteria in the sapwood of beech logs was similar to that in the sapwood of pine logs, ranging from 1.0 × 101 to 4.6 × 104 CFU/g. However, the concentration of these bacteria in the air of a beech processing sawmill was within a range of 7.8 × 103–1.3 × 104 CFU/m3, being significantly higher than in a pine processing sawmill. Enterobacteriaceae strains, mostly Enterobacter spp. and Rahnella spp., made up 70–75% of Gram-negative bacteria isolated from pine and beech wood and from the air pollutedwith sawdust from these woods. The aerial exposure to Gram-negative bacteria possessing endotoxic andallergenic properties poses potential risk ofoccupational respiratory disorders among sawmillworkers, in particular those processing beech wood. |
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Keywords: | bioaerosols Gram-negative bacteria sawmills timber wood dust woodworkers |
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