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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Cavalleri is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Cavalleri.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1991

Acquired dyschromatopsia among styrene-exposed workers.

Fabriziomaria Gobba; C Galassi; Marcello Imbriani; Sergio Ghittori; Silvia Candela; Alessandro Cavalleri

We investigated the occurrence of color vision loss in 75 styrene-exposed workers and in 60 referents. Color vision was evaluated by adopting the Lanthony D 15 desaturated panel, a test specifically suited to detect mild acquired dyschromatopsia. The results of the test were expressed as Color Confusion Index. Styrene exposure was evaluated with both environmental and biological monitoring. Airborne levels of the solvent were 3.3 to 549.5 mg/m3. In styrene-exposed workers color vision was significantly impaired when compared with referents matched for age. A significative correlation was found between environmental and urinary levels of styrene and Color Confusion Index excluding the influence of age in multiple regression analysis, indicating the possibility of a dose-effect relationship. The findings suggest that styrene can induce an early appearance of a dose-dependent color vision loss.


Neuroscience Letters | 1994

Perchloroethylene exposure can induce colour vision loss

Alessandro Cavalleri; Fabriziomaria Gobba; Monica Paltrinieri; Guglielmina Fantuzzi; Elena Righi; Gabriella Aggazzotti

We evaluated colour vision in 35 dry-cleaners exposed to perchloroethylene (PCE) and in a paired number of controls matched for sex, age, alcohol consumption and cigarette smoking. A subclinical colour vision loss, mainly in the blue-yellow range, was present in dry-cleaners. This effect was related to PCE exposure levels, and appeared at environmental concentrations of the solvent well below the current exposure limits for exposed workers. The results suggest that PCE exposure, even at low environmental levels, can induce a dose-related impairment of colour vision.


Toxicology Letters | 1995

Colour vision loss in workers exposed to elemental mercury vapour

Alessandro Cavalleri; Luisa Belotti; Fabriziomaria Gobba; Giorgio Luzzana; Paolo Rosa; Paolo Seghizzi

We evaluated colour vision in 33 workers exposed to elemental mercury (Hg) vapour and in 33 referents matched for sex, age, alcohol consumption and cigarette smoking. The results were expressed as colour confusion index (CCI). In the workers urinary excretion of Hg (HgU) ranged from 28 to 287 micrograms/g creatinine. Subclinical colour vision loss, mainly in the blue-yellow range, was observed in the workers. This effect was related to exposure, as indicated by the correlation between HgU and CCI (r = 0.488, P < 0.01). In the workers whose HgU exceeded 50 micrograms/g creatinine, mean CCI was significantly increased compared to the matched referents. The results suggest that exposure to elemental Hg inducing HgU values exceeding 50 micrograms/g creatinine can induce a dose-related colour vision loss.


Science of The Total Environment | 1988

Chromium in urine, serum and red blood cells in the biological monitoring of workers exposed to different chromium valency states

Claudio Minoia; Alessandro Cavalleri

Using personal air sampling exposure to hexavalent and trivalent chromium was measured in 22 workers mainly exposed to Cr(VI) and in 15 workers mainly exposed to Cr(III) as basic chromium sulphate. Determination of Cr(VI) in the urine of all the subjects using a selective technique by ETA-AAS and liquid anion exchangers failed to show detectable amounts of the hexavalent form, the detection limit of the technique being 0.05 micrograms/L. A clear relationship between exposure and postshift urinary total chromium was found in subjects exposed to Cr(VI), while urinary levels in workers exposed to chromic sulphate high concentration proved lower. Determination of total chromium in serum and red blood cells showed a significant increase of chromium levels in erythrocytes of workers exposed to Cr(VI) while in subjects mainly exposed to Cr(III) an increase of the serum fraction was observed. The results demonstrate that Cr(III) is absorbed through the respiratory tract, but its kinetics and distribution in the body are not the same as for Cr(VI), and are not adequately monitored by short-term urinary determinations. Oxidation states of chromium largely influence uptake, mechanism of absorption, transport and organ distribution as well as toxicity of chromium-containing compounds. In particular, hexavalent derivatives are known to induce adverse effects, both acute and chronic, in occupationally exposed subjects, while there is little conclusive evidence for toxic effects caused by trivalent chromium compounds. Biological monitoring of exposure to chromium(VI) has usually been performed by determining total chromium levels in urine, whereas biological monitoring data in subjects occupationally exposed to Cr(III) are still scanty.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Archives of Environmental Health | 2000

Dose-Related Color Vision Impairment in Toluene-Exposed Workers

Alessandro Cavalleri; Fabriziomaria Gobba; Eleonora Nicali; Vittorio Fiocchi

Abstract Occupational exposure to various neurotoxic chemicals can impair color vision. We evaluated this possibility in toluene-exposed workers. Thirty-three rubber workers and 16 referents were studied. We estimated toluene exposure by measuring urinary excretion of the unmodified form of the solvent (i.e., TolU). Color vision was tested with the Lanthony D-15 desaturated panel, and the outcomes were expressed quantitatively with the Color Confusion Index and the Total Confusion Index. Toluene-exposed workers had a subclinical reduction in color vision, compared with referents. We related this effect to solvent cumulative exposure—estimated as the product of urinary excretion of unmodified toluene by previous toluene exposure duration. This approach supports the hypothesis that impairment progresses as exposure continues. In the examined group of workers, toluene exposure was within the occupational limit proposed by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists. The observed loss in color vision raises doubts on the real protection afforded by this limit—at least for effects of the solvent on the eyes. Finally, the Total Confusion Index was a more sensitive index than the Color Confusion Index in the evaluation of toluene-related color-vision impairment, suggesting that this index should be adopted in future studies of the effects of chemicals on color perception.


International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 1988

Visual fatigue in video display terminal operators: objective measure and relation to environmental conditions.

Fabriziomaria Gobba; A. Broglia; R. Sarti; F. Luberto; Alessandro Cavalleri

SummaryThe lighting conditions, luminance, contrast, and design of the workplace were studied in video display terminal (VDT) work stations operated by a group of female VDT data-acquisition clerks. VDT-induced symptoms were assessed by means of subject answers to a questionnaire. To measure VDT-induced ocular fatigue objectively, refraction power was determined before and at the end of workshift by an infrared autorefractometer. Job-induced refraction changes were then related to visual complaints and conditions in the workplace. The results confirmed that VDT data-acquisition work can lead to temporary myopia (myopization) in a remarkable percentage of operators; a significant correlation between eye discomfort, ocular asthenopia, and myopization was also found. Illumination levels, luminance, and contrast seem to be of paramount importance regarding visual symptoms: neither asthenopia nor myopization was observed when all of these conditions were adequate. If the ergonomic design of the workplace and the viewing distance are adequate, there are also usually fewer musculoskeletal symptoms. Our results suggest that changes in the ocular refraction status before and at the end of the workshift, as determined by an automatic refractometer, provide a good objective index of VDT-induced “ocular fatigue”, which in our study proved to be significantly related to workplace conditions.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1978

Determination of plasma lead levels in normal subjects and in lead-exposed workers.

Alessandro Cavalleri; Claudio Minoia; Luigi Pozzoli; A. Baruffini

ABSTRACT Lead levels in whole blood and in plasma were measured in 64 non-exposed and in 29 exposed subjects with signs and symptoms of varying severity. Lead was determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry after chelation with ammonium pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate and extraction with methyl isobutyl ketone. The method has a sensitivity of 0·4 μg/100 ml (0·02 μmol/l) for whole blood and of 0·2 μg/100 ml (0·01 μmol/l) for plasma and is reliably accurate and precise. Plasma lead increases progressively and significantly with the increase of whole blood lead, while its relative percentage in the plasma remains practically constant at all concentrations in whole blood. In exposed subjects a highly significant correlation was found between lead in plasma and lead in urine (r = 0·549) but the correlation coefficient was higher for whole blood lead versus urinary lead (r = 0·938). Aminolevulinic acid excretion in urine appeared to be significantly related to plasma lead concentration (r = 0·563) but to a greater extent to whole blood levels (r = 0·801). There was no significant correlation between lead in plasma and the logarithm of aminolevulinic acid dehydratase. The hypothesis is advanced that plasma lead, the more biologically active fraction of the metal, could be related to different individual sensitivities which would condition the development of toxic effects in various organs at different levels of lead.


Toxicology Letters | 1999

Determination of S-phenylmercapturic acid in urine as an indicator of exposure to benzene

Sergio Ghittori; Marcello Imbriani; Luciano Maestri; E. Capodaglio; Alessandro Cavalleri

S-phenylmercapturic acid (S-PMA) was measured in urine from 145 subjects exposed to low benzene concentrations in the air (C(I), benzene). The 8-h, time-weighted exposure intensity of individual workers was monitored by means of charcoal tubes and subsequent gas-chromatographic analysis after desorption with CS2. S-PMA excretion level in urine was determined by high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection. The following linear correlation was found between S-PMA concentrations in urine and benzene concentrations in the breathing zone: log(S-PMA, microg/g creatinine) = 0.712 log (C(I)-benzene, ppm) + 1.644 (n = 145, r = 0.74, P < 0.001). The geometric mean (GSD) of S-PMA concentrations in urine from 45 subjects occupationally not exposed to benzene but smoking more than 20 cigarettes/day was 7.8 microg/g creatinine (2.11), the corresponding value among non-smokers being 1.0 microg/g creatinine (2.18). It is concluded that the urinary level of S-PMA can be regarded as a useful indicator of exposure to benzene.


Analyst | 1983

Electrothermal atomisation atomic-absorption spectrophotometric determination of chromium(VI) in urine by solvent extraction separation with liquid anion exchangers

Claudio Minoia; Ambrogio Mazzucotelli; Alessandro Cavalleri; Vincenzo Minganti

An electrothermal atomic-absorption spectrophotometric determination of chromium(VI) in urine samples is described. The separation of these ions from the biological matrix by using high relative molecular mass amines (such as Amberlite LA-1 or LA-2 liquid anion exchangers) is also reported.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1994

Occupational and Environmental Exposure to Perchloroethylene (PCE) in Dry Cleaners and Their Family Members

Gabriella Aggazzotti; Guglielmina Fantuzzi; Elena Righi; Guerrino Predieri; Fabriziomaria Gobba; Monica Paltrinieri; Alessandro Cavalleri

Perchloroethylene exposure in 28 dry-cleaning establishments and in 25 homes occupied by dry cleaners in Modena, Italy, was investigated. Environmental air samples and alveolar air samples from dry cleaners (n = 60) and from their family members (n = 23) were collected. The degree of perchloroethylene on the dry-cleaning premises varied widely from establishment to establishment. Spot sampling ranged from 0.6 to 75 mg/m3, whereas sampling by personal passive dosimeters ranged from 2.6 to 221.5 mg/m3 (8-h time weighted average values). Perchloroethylene in alveolar air samples collected at the end of the work day correlated closely with the 8-h time weighted average values (r = .750, p = .001), and correlated also with alveolar air samples collected at home in the evening (r = .665, p = .001) and the following morning (r = .549, p < .001). Perchloroethylene levels inside the homes of dry cleaners appeared significantly higher than in 29 houses selected as controls (Mann Whitney U test, p < .001). Perchloroethylene in alveolar air samples collected at home suggests that nonoccupational exposure to perchloroethylene for family members of dry cleaners exists.

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Fabriziomaria Gobba

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Elena Righi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Gabriella Aggazzotti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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