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Case Report
Parkinson's disease in a worker exposed to insecticides at a greenhouse
Yangwoo Kim, Inah Kim, Jung-Min Sung, Jaechul Song
Ann Occup Environ Med 2021;33:e6.   Published online February 5, 2021
DOI: https://doi.org/10.35371/aoem.2021.33.e6
AbstractAbstract PDFPubReaderePub
Background

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a rare, neurodegenerative disease with various occupational and environmental risk factors. Exposure to specific pesticides contributes significantly to the incidence of PD. However, it is difficult to measure the level of pesticide exposure in workers. This study presents the first case recognized the work-relatedness between PD and pesticide exposure.

Case presentation

A 68-year-old male was diagnosed with PD after working with pesticides at a tomato greenhouse for 12 years and 5 months. From the results of a field study, it was reasonable to assume that the patient had been exposed to a significant level of various insecticides. In the present report, we described the first accepted case of work-relatedness between PD and exposure to pesticides. The evaluation was conducted using the following steps: we ruled out other possible risk factors including additional occupational history and personal risk factors, we assessed the work environment, surveyed possible exposures, found proper epidemiological evidence, and calculated the probability of causation. The work-relatedness was determined through the review of epidemiological evidence and estimation of exposure situation and level, and biological plausibility. We also decided work-relatedness based on the exposure of PD related pesticides with identified biologically plausible and the presumption that the exposure level would be high due to the working process.

Conclusions

In this case, the field study and epidemiological results supported the work-relatedness of PD and exposure to pesticides. Moreover, the results of previous studies have confirmed a causal relationship between exposure to pesticides and PD.


Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Rotenone-Induced Model of Parkinson’s Disease: Beyond Mitochondrial Complex I Inhibition
    María Teresa Ibarra-Gutiérrez, Norma Serrano-García, Marisol Orozco-Ibarra
    Molecular Neurobiology.2023; 60(4): 1929.     CrossRef
  • Food Contamination: An Unexplored Possible Link between Dietary Habits and Parkinson’s Disease
    Giulia Caioni, Annamaria Cimini, Elisabetta Benedetti
    Nutrients.2022; 14(7): 1467.     CrossRef
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Review
Health Effects of Manganese and Some Recent Issues in Manganese Neurotoxicity Research
Yangho Kim
Korean Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2009;21(1):87-105.   Published online March 31, 2009
DOI: https://doi.org/10.35371/kjoem.2009.21.1.87
AbstractAbstract PDF
INTRODUCTION: This article reviews the health effects of manganese (Mn) and introduces readers to recent issues in Mn neurotoxicity research.
METHODS
An extensive Medline search that covered publications up to December 2008 was conducted and the relevant papers and their references were evaluated for review.
RESULTS
AND DISCUSSION: Exposure to excess levels of the essential trace element Mn produces cognitive, psychiatric, and motor abnormalities. The lungs and the gastrointestinal tract both absorb Mn, but homeostatic mechanisms limit the absorption of Mn by the gastrointestinal tract. Elimination of Mn occurs primarily by excretion into the bile. Average Mn levels in the blood reflect the total body burden on a group basis, but not on an individual basis. Previous studies have shown that blood Mn contributes to a high pallidal signal in a T1-weighted brain MRI and that the high signal is an effective predictor of neurobehavioral performance. Thus, a high pallidal signal on an MRI may offer clues concerning the target organ dose from Mn exposure in the spectrum of Mn symptomatology. Neuroimaging as well as a clinical evaluation with exposure history is very important in a differential diagnosis that can distinguish manganism from Parkinson disease (PD). Recent research on Mn neurotoxicity has focused on several issues. First, concerns about the interaction between manganism and PD have been raised, but further research is needed. Second, epidemiological studies on non-occupational Mn exposure have suggested that environmentally induced neurotoxicities may have features that are different from the classic features of occupational manganism, but, again, this requires further research. Third, liver cirrhosis could be used as a model of manganism. Finally, functional neuroimaging such as magnetic resonance spectroscopy, functional MRI, or diffusion tensor imaging appears to have promising applications in Mn research.
CONCLUSION
Reviewing the health effects of Mn and recent issues in Mn neurotoxicity research provides us with important suggestions for how to pursue other lines of toxicological research as well as for how best to develop a systematic understanding of Mn symptomatology.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Fundamental Study on Adsorption of Manganese in Water using Manganese-oxide coated Sand (MCS) Generated in a Filtration Tank of a Mine Drainage Treatment Facility
    Sangwoo Ji, Dong-Wan Cho, Gil-Jae Yim, Jong-Man An, Gi-O An, Jeong-Yun Jang, Young-Wook Cheong
    Journal of the Korean Society of Mineral and Energy Resources Engineers.2020; 57(3): 249.     CrossRef
  • A large, nationwide, longitudinal study of central nervous system diseases among Korean workers exposed to manganese
    Jin-Ha Yoon, Yeon-Soon Ahn
    Parkinsonism & Related Disorders.2015; 21(3): 194.     CrossRef
  • Associations between Airborne Manganese and Blood Manganese in the Korean General Population according to KNHANES 2008-2009
    Kyung Sick Jung, Jong Dae Lee, Yong Bae Kim
    Journal of Environmental Science International.2013; 22(12): 1589.     CrossRef
  • Occupational Neurological Disorders in Korea
    Eun-A Kim, Seong-Kyu Kang
    Journal of Korean Medical Science.2010; 25(Suppl): S26.     CrossRef
  • 28 View
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  • 4 Crossref
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