[Urine output of phenol in industrial workers exposed to benzene in the shoe industry]. 1976

N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D009784 Occupational Diseases Diseases caused by factors involved in one's employment. Diseases, Occupational,Occupational Illnesses,Disease, Occupational,Illnesse, Occupational,Illnesses, Occupational,Occupational Disease,Occupational Illnesse
D009787 Occupational Medicine Medical specialty concerned with the promotion and maintenance of the physical and mental health of employees in occupational settings. Industrial Medicine,Medicine, Industrial,Medicine, Occupational
D010636 Phenols Benzene derivatives that include one or more hydroxyl groups attached to the ring structure.
D001938 Brazil A country located on the eastern coast of South America, located between Colombia and Peru, that borders the Atlantic Ocean. It is bordered on the north by Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana, on the south by Uruguay, and on the west by Argentina. The capital is Brasilia.
D004781 Environmental Exposure The exposure to potentially harmful chemical, physical, or biological agents in the environment or to environmental factors that may include ionizing radiation, pathogenic organisms, or toxic chemicals. Exposure, Environmental,Environmental Exposures,Exposures, Environmental
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D001554 Benzene Toxic, volatile, flammable liquid hydrocarbon byproduct of coal distillation. It is used as an industrial solvent in paints, varnishes, lacquer thinners, gasoline, etc. Benzene causes central nervous system damage acutely and bone marrow damage chronically and is carcinogenic. It was formerly used as parasiticide. Benzol,Benzole,Cyclohexatriene
D001711 Biotransformation The chemical alteration of an exogenous substance by or in a biological system. The alteration may inactivate the compound or it may result in the production of an active metabolite of an inactive parent compound. The alterations may be divided into METABOLIC DETOXICATION, PHASE I and METABOLIC DETOXICATION, PHASE II.

Related Publications

N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
December 1974, Blood,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
January 1981, International archives of occupational and environmental health,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
May 1991, Epidemiology (Cambridge, Mass.),
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
December 1996, Environmental health perspectives,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
January 1988, Medycyna pracy,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
January 1994, Occupational and environmental medicine,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
January 1987, American journal of industrial medicine,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
March 2007, Neurotoxicology,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
January 1981, American journal of industrial medicine,
N G de Fernícola, and C T Wakamatsu, and R Mendes, and E Moraes
April 1988, British journal of industrial medicine,
Copied contents to your clipboard!