Vanadium and Cancer
Vanadium
and Compounds - Edouard Bastarache
Section: Materials, Subsection: Safety
Description
Vanadium
and Compounds - Edouard Bastarache
Article
Compounds
The monoxide and dioxide, trioxide, pentoxide, chlorides,
dioxichloride, trioxichloride, fluorides, iodide, sulphate,
trisulphide, ammonium metavanadate, sodium metavanadate,
sodium orthovanadate and sodium pyrovanadate.
It is the pentoxide that may be used by ceramists as a coloring
material in glazes.
Uses
Most of the vanadium produced in the world is in the form
of pentoxide (V2O5) which is used for producing alloys:
* ferrovanadium containing from 30% to 95% vanadium,
* special steels with vanadium carbide,
* hard alloys with chromium, nickel, manganese, boron, titanium,
tungsten,
* etc.
Mineral
compounds are used as hot catalysts:
* in petrochemistry,
* for the production of sulphuric acid,
* for the production of phtalic anhydride,
* in the oxidation of ethanol.
They
also enter the composition of pigments used:
* in dyeing,
* in glassmaking,
* in ceramics
Moreover
they are used :
* as developers in photography,
* in the manufacture of inks and luminescent materials.
Exposure
1. Non-professional exposure: General population exposure
comes above all from air pollution in the vicinity of thermoelectric
power stations. Tobacco smoke contains of 1-8 ppm vanadium.
Food provides some too; in general vanadium is undetectable
in water. 2. Professional exposure: Fume is recognized as
being generally more toxic than dust considering their smaller
particulate dimension which allows a more complete penetration
the level of the small airways of the lungs.
There
is metallurgy:
* ore precessing,
* refining of the pentoxide,
* manufacture of alloys.
Catalysts
handling in petrochemistry (cleaning of tanks and reactors).
Activities
exposing to soots and ashes from fuel and mineral oils.
Cleaning
and/or repairing of boilers burners as well as tanks in
refineries and on ships, work in stove-building/boilermaking
are important sources of workers' contamination.
The
contamination of workers results from inhalation of dust
and fume, generally in the form of pentavalent derivatives.
25% of the inhaled dose is absorbed, whereas absorbtion
by ingestion is less than 1%. In vitro, on human skin, radioctive
vanadium does not penetrate skin.
Toxicity
Experimentally, the most toxic are the pentavalent, and
also the most soluble compounds.
1.
Iatrogenic intoxications:
Sodium
metavanadate was used in the 1920s and 1930s in the treatment
of several diseases at doses between 50 to 150 mg/day, and
no particular undesirable effect was observed.
On
the other hand, vanadium and ammonium tartrate, in amounts
varying between 50 and 150 mg/day caused:
* tiredness,
* greenish colored tongue,
* abdominal pains,
* soft stools.
Because
of supposed anabolic properties, vanadyl sulphate is used
by athletes and body-builders in doses reaching 60 mg/day.
However,
a clinical trial carried out in 1995 in New Zealand at a
dose of 0.5mg/kg/day for 12 weeks did not show any effect
on several blood parameters such as blood count, blood viscosity,
proteins, lipids, creatinine, bilirubin, liver transaminases,
etc.
2.
Acute intoxication by ingestion: There are only two cases
described in the world medical literature following vanadium
salts ingestion.
In
the 1st case that occurred in Poland, the amount of pentoxide
ingested is unknown and the clinical picture included :
* severe hemorrhagic gastroenteritis,
* hypovolemia,
* electrolytes disorders (hypokaliemia and hyponatremia).
No
visceral effect occurred.
In
the 2nd case, the amount ingested was 10 with 15g. of sodium
metavanadate and the clinical picture included :
* nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea,
* greenish colored tongue and gums,
* erosive gastritis,
* neurological disorders,
* reduction in prothrombin time, platelets and fibrinogen.
3.
Professional intoxications:
a-Acute
intoxication:
-By
projection:
Accidental
projection on the skin and/or in the eye of a concentrated
solution of chlorides or oxides of vanadium causes chemical
burns of nonspecific aspect, of variable intensity according
to the precocity of decontamination.
Treatment
is symptomatic, particularly abundant fluhing with tap water.
-By
inhalation:
Inhalation
of vapor, fume or dust of vanadium oxides causes respiratory
accidents ranging from simple rhinopharyngeal and tracheal
irritation to chemical broncho-pneumonopathy.
Signs
may be delayed from several hours to several days.
In
the absence of adequate individual protection, one may find:
* surperficial conjunctivitis,
* rhinitis with epistaxis,
* violent dry cough.
* sputum, occasionally greenish,
* thoracic pain,
* exertional shortness of breath,
* rales and wheezing as signs of a bronchospasm which may
last up to several weeks.
In
the case of massive inhalation, respiratory disorders may
be accompanied by nonspecific general signs:
* tiredness,
* intense frontal headache,
* ebrious sensation,
* nausea,
* metallic taste,
* pruriginous erythema.
Respiratory
function testing shows a fall in the Forced Expiratory Volume
1.0 second(FEV1.0), and also sometimes a nonspecific bronchial
hyperreactivity.
Persistence
of Reactive Airways Dysfonction Syndrome (RADS, Brooks'syndrome)
is suggested in an Australian publication. In practice,
the presence of a Brooks' syndrome must be systematically
searched for after the event.
Laboratory
tests usually show very high blood and/or urinary vanadium
levels; according to reported cases, urinary concentrations
may vary from 280 µg/L to 4 mg/L, whereas the normal
level varies from 0.1 to 0.2 µg/L.
Treatment
is symptomatic:
-oxygen, -bronchodilators(ß-adrenergic agonists),
-no chelating treatment has proved to be effective.
b-
Chronic intoxication :
Local
effects:
-
Digestive effects :
A metal taste and a greenish colored tongue represent characteristic
signs of massive dust contamination of the workplace and
inefficient individual protection gears.
Swallowing of inhaled particles can be responsible for minor
digestive symptomd like :
-heart burns -loose stools quickly reversible at the end
of exposure.
- Skin effects :
Cases of exzema-like dermatitis were reported in a Swedish
study, around respiratory protection masks, hands, wrists
and forearms, but only one worker tested positive to 2%
sodium metavanadate in water skin test. No other publication
reports confirmed allergy to vanadium, the sensitizing capacity
of the metal appears improbable.
-Respiratory effects :
Repeated exposure to dust and fume can cause airways irritation
and asthma-like symptoms and signs.
E.N.T. pathologies may be :
-rhinitis -pharyngitis and/or laryngitis.
Biopsies of the nasal mucous membrane showed a nonspecific
inflammatory process.
Respiratory disorders may include :
-cough -thoracic wheezing or -delayed dyspneic (shortness
of breath) crises -long term nonspecific bronchial hyperreactivity
which corresponds to the definition of asthma caused by
repeated exposure to peaked concentrations of irritating
vapors or fumes, or Reactive Airways Dysfonction Syndrome
(RADS).
Systemic effects :
All of the well controlled studies which attempted to demonstrate
neurological, cardiovascular or other effects, proved to
be negative.
Genotoxicity and carcinogenesis :
Experimentally :
Vanadium and compounds do not appear genotoxic; they are
not mutagen nor cancerogenic.
In man :
No surmortality due to cancer, in particular bronchial,
has been observed in the industrial setting.
Reproduction :
Experimentally :
Reproduction toxicity studies in the rat and the mouse are
negative when the amounts used are nontoxic to the mother.
As for sodium metavanadate, maternal toxicity is observed
following a dose of 7.5 mg/kg/day, while embryofoetotoxicity
is observed with doses greater than 15mg/kg/jour.
In man :
In man, there is no indication that vanadium can influence
reproduction unfavourably.
Exposure :
The VEMP for vanadium pentoxide is 0.05 mg/m3 expressed
as V2O5, for fume and respirable dust, in Quebec.
Prevention :
So good house keeping of your studio is very important;
to do so you may, among other things, use wet processes,
or even a vacuum system whose air is exhausted outside of
the workshop.
Avoidance of processes generating unnecessary dust is also
importan. To this, we may add work in closed systems and
improvement of the general ventilation.
Adequate equipment of respiratory protection should be worn
during handling of vanadium compounds, and during cleaning
of equipment which burns coal or mineral oils as in power
stations.
Workers in confined places, as in boilers , must wear acid-proof
clothing well fitted to the wrists and ankles, with adequate
gloves and rubber boots. Good personal hygiene is necessary
and double lockers should be available to separate working
clothes from personal clothing.
Medical surveillance :
Clinical monitoring of exposed workers may include periodical
spirometric measurements.
It may also include urinary biometrology which reflects
the exposure that occurred in the previous 2 or 3 days.
The biological exposure index used in France is 50µg/g
of creatinine.
Some authors propose the use of skin testing to screen those
who would be sensitized to vanadium compounds, but this
possibility seems very rare according to french authors.
Edouard Bastarache M.D. (Occupational & Environmental
Medicicne) Author of « Substitutions for Raw Ceramics
Materials » edouardb@sorel-tracy.qc.ca http://www.sorel-tracy.qc.ca/~edouardb/
Sorel-Tracy Quebec Canada
References :
1-Occupational Medicine, Carl Zenz, last edition. 2-Occupational
& Environmental Medicine, Joseph LaDou, last edition.
3-Chemical Hazards of the Workplace, Proctor & Hughes,
last edition. 4-Sax's Dangerous Properties of Industrial
Materials, Lewis C., last edition. 5-Clinical Environmental
Health and Toxic Exposures, Sullivan & Krieger, 2001
5-Industrial Chemical Exposure, Lauwerys & Hoet, last
edition. 7-Toxicologie Industrielle et Intoxications Professionnelles,
Lauwerys R.,1999 8-Encyclopedie Medico-Chirurgicale- Toxicologie-Pathologie
Professionnelle Paris, Testud F.; septembre 2001.
Links to Other Items
* Pentoxyde de Vanadium Toxicologie - Edouard Bastarache
* Vanadium Pentoxide
* VANADIUM
Authors
* EDOUARD BASTARACHE (Owner)
* Tony Hansen
* Tony Hansen
Angstrom Minerals Product And Price List
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