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PHYSICAL HAZARDS

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PHYSICAL HAZARDS. H.R.Sarreshtahdar , MD. Physical hazards. Heat Cold Vibration Radiation Atmospheric pressure changes. HEAT. How does body get rid of heat?. Conduction Convection Radiation Evaporation. Factors affect body temperature. Air temperature Radiation Air motion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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PHYSICAL PHYSICAL HAZARDS HAZARDS H.R.Sarreshtahdar, MD H.R.Sarreshtahdar, MD
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Page 1: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

PHYSICAL PHYSICAL HAZARDSHAZARDS

H.R.Sarreshtahdar, MDH.R.Sarreshtahdar, MD

Page 2: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Physical hazards

Heat

Cold

Vibration

Radiation

Atmospheric pressure changes

Page 3: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

HEAT

Page 4: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

How does body get rid of heat?

Conduction

Convection

Radiation

Evaporation

Page 5: PHYSICAL HAZARDS
Page 6: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Factors affect body temperatureo Air temperature

o Radiation

o Air motion

o Humidity

o Type of clothing

o Time exposed

o Workload

o Age/sex/raceo Mass/weighto Health status

DiseasesDrugs

o Acclimatization status

Page 7: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

WBGT index The most important index of workplace

heat exposure

Calculation:

• Air temp.

• Air motion

• Radiant heat

• humidity

Page 8: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat Balance

Page 9: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Body response to heat

Peripheral vasodilatation

Sweating

Change in metabolic rate

Increased plasma & fluid volume

Page 10: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Occupational exposure to heat

Outdoor

o Farmers

o Postage workers

o Ranchers

o Military personnel

o Fishers

o Construction workers

Indoor

o Foundry

workers

o Steel workers

o Oven/Furnace

workers

o Glassblowers

Page 11: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat-related syndrome

Heat stroke

Heat exhaustion

Heat cramps

Heat syncope

Page 12: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat stroke Signs and symptoms:

Cerebral dysfunction and altered mental status Hyperpyrexia (core temperature → 41.1°C) hot, dry skin (classic), or moist skin (exertional) Seizure, coma, tachycardia, hypotension

Laboratory: ↑leukocytes, ↓ serum K, Ca, P, ↑ BUN, CPK, ALT,

AST Concentrated urine with myoglobinuria, pr.uria,

tubular casts Hyperuricemia, DIC, thrombocytopenia

Page 13: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat stroke Treatment: Rapid reduction of body temperature: In the workplace:

Shady cool place removing clothes use evaporative cooling (The best method):

spraying entire body with cool water, blowing cool air to the body Or Use ice packs, or water immersion

Page 14: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

PreventionPrevention Avoid reexposure to heat at least for 4 weeks

Work-rest regimens according to heat TLV

acclimatization

Engineering controls

Special suits

Shaded rest areas

Cool drinking water or electrolyte/carbohydrate

solutions

Page 15: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat exhaustion Strenuous work in hot climates

Volume/electrolyte depletion

Core temperature > 38°C

Symptoms and signs:

Intense thirst, weakness, nausea, headache,

confusion, tachycardia, profuse sweating, moist skin

Important: may progress to heat stroke

Treatment: placing the patient in a cool and shaded

area, provide hydration and salt (oral or IV)

Page 16: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat cramp Salt deficiency (replacement of sweat loss with

water) Symptoms and signs:Painful muscle contractions, weakness, nausea,

vomitingMoist and cool skinEuthermiaElevated CPKMove the patient to a cool environment + balanced

salt solutions (4tsp salt per gallon of water)1-3 days rest + salt supplementation

Page 17: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Heat syncope

Sudden unconsciousness after strenuous

work

Cutaneous vasodilation

Cool, moist skin

Hypotension

Treatment:

cooling and liquids

Page 18: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Prevention

Worker selection

Acclimatization

Work-rest cycles

Availability of cool places

Availability of cool drinks

Page 19: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

COLD STRESS IN THE WORKPLACE

Page 20: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Body reaction to cold environment

Increase heat generation

Shivering

Decrease heat loss

Vasoconstriction

Page 21: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Risk factors

Alcohol

Opium

CNS depresants

Alpha agonists & antagonists

Direct vasodilatator

Beta antagonists

Page 22: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Cold-induced diseases

Systemic

Local

Freezing

Frost bite

Non-freezing

Immersion foot

Page 23: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Systemic hypothermiaBody core T <35°C

Mild

Moderate

Severe

Page 24: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Treatment

Remove wet garments

Protect against heat loss

Maintain horizontal position

Avoid excess movements

Monitor core temperature

Monitor cardiac rhythm

Page 25: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Treatment Pulse present:

Adequate ventilation and O2 administration Electrolyte and acid-base correction Blood pressure correction Rewarming:

Passive rewarming Active external rewarming (warm blankets, warm baths) Active internal rewarming (blood, peritoneal dialysis,

heated air)

Pulse absent: CPR until core T> 35 rewarming

Page 26: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

PreventionPrevention Wind chill index

Temperature Wind velocity

Prevent core T from falling below 36°C Work-rest cycles according to WC index

and work intensity Suitable clothes Wind-protected, warm shelters Available hot food and drinks

Page 27: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

FrostnipFrostnipFrostnip is the freezing of upper layers of the

skin.

Characterized by:- white, waxy skin.- general numbness

Frostnip is generally reversible and does no major tissue damage.

Page 28: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Frostnip - treatmentFrostnip - treatmentGently warm area by blowing warm air on it

or by placing it near a warm body part.

DO NOT rub the area! Rubbing can rupture frozen cells, causing extensive damage.

• Frostnip is a warning sign of possible frostbite

Page 29: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

FrostbiteFrostbiteFrostbite is a freezing of the surface and

deep layers of tissue.

Characterized by:- white, and feels “woody”- numbness, possible anesthesia- deep frostbite can affect bone and muscle- purple/black color is from ruptured blood vessels

Page 30: PHYSICAL HAZARDS
Page 31: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Frostbite - treatmentImmerse affected area in 40-42 degrees C

water until thawing is complete.- part will be extremely painful

Wrap affected part in sterile gauzeAffected part should not be used for

anything- keep part from refreezing

Page 32: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Immersion Foot – trench footImmersion foot is caused by prolonged exposure of

the feet to wet, cool conditions.

Characterized by:- yellowish, smelly feet- possibly numb- sloughing of skin tissue/itching

*Immersion foot may cause permanent damage to foot tissues, leaving person susceptible to cold injuries in future.

Page 33: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Immersion Foot - treatment- Careful washing and drying of feet.

- Keep feet dry as much as possible.

- Keep off feet as much as possible until healed.

Page 34: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

VIBRATION

Page 35: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Types

Whole- body vibration

Segmental vibration

Page 36: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

WBV A kind of cummulative trauma

Jobs: drivers, miners, heavy equipment

operators

Frequency: 1 – 80 Hz (esp. below 20 Hz)

Two types: vertical (4-8Hz)

horizontal (1-2Hz)

Page 37: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Disorders Musculoskeletal (LBP, Disk degeneration,

disk calcification, …) Neurological (decreased visual acuity,

Labyrinth disorders, insomnia,…) Circulatory Digestive Reproductive (abortion, congenital

malformation, …)

Page 38: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Prevention

↓ exposure duration

↓ unnecessary exposures

Isolation

Careful maintenance of machines

Resting after exposure

Page 39: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Segmental Vibration

Frequency: 5-5000 Hz (esp. 125-300 Hz)

Jobs: work with chain saw, grinder, sander,

pneumatic drill, jackhammer

Disorders: HAVS (Vibration-induced white

finger)

Page 40: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

HAVS A kind of secondary Raynaulds

phenomenon Signs and symptoms:

numbness and tingling → blanching →cyanosis → atrophy → ulceration → gangrene

Advanced disease: bone and cartilage degeneration, joint stiffness, clumsiness

Page 41: PHYSICAL HAZARDS
Page 42: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Treatment

Removing from more exposure

Massage, Shaking, Warm water

Nifedipine

PGE

Page 43: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Prevention Better tool design

Anti-vibration gloves

HAV standards

Work practices

Medical surveillance

Work/rest cycles

Page 44: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Work practices A/V gloves

Adequate clothing

Keep the hands warm

Avoidance from wetting the hands

Avoidance from smoking

Let the tool do the work

Maintain tools carefully

Page 45: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Types of radiationTypes of radiation Ionizing

Electromagnetic energy X-ray Gamma ray

Subatomic particles Electron Proton Α particle

Non-ionizing

Page 46: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Definition: energy in the form of particles or waves

Types of radiation Ionizing: removes electrons from atoms

Particulate (alphas and betas) Waves (gamma and X-rays)

Non-ionizing (electromagnetic): can't remove electrons from atoms

infrared, visible, microwaves, radar, radio waves, lasers

Page 47: PHYSICAL HAZARDS

Radiation wavelength in angstrom units

108 106 104 102 1 10-2 10-4 10-6

X-RaysRadio Infrared Visible

Ultra-VioletLight

Gamma Rays

Cosmic Rays

10-10 10-8 10-6 10-4 10-2 1 102

Photon energy in million electron volts (MeV)

22 4 10


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