000 02930cam a2200313 4500
001 9241571624
020 _a9241571624
035 _a(Sirsi) 9241571624
060 _aQD 341.E7
245 0 0 _aBrominated diphenyl ethers /
_cpublished under the joint sponsorship of the United Nations Environment Programme, the International Labour Organisation, and the World Health Organization.
260 _aGeneva :
_bWorld Health Organization,
_c1994.
300 _a347 p.
440 0 _aEnvironmental health criteria ;
_v162
500 _aSummary and evaluation, conclusions and recommendations in French and Spanish.
520 3 _aEvaluates the risks to human health and the environment posed by exposure to ten brominated diphenyl ethers. Of these, three (decabromodiphenyl ether, octabromodiphenyl ether, and pentabromodiphenyl ether) are widely manufactured and used as additive flame retardants. The remaining seven compounds occur as contaminants or impurities in commercial brominated flame retardants. Because of their success in reducing fire hazards for the general public, brominated biphenyl ethers are used in increasing quantities in a wide range of products. Concern about potential risks to human health and the environment has centered on the persistence of these chemicals in the environment, thir tendency to bioaccumulate, their detection in several food items and in human adipose tissue and milk, their tendency to leach or escape from finished products during normal operation, and the release of polybrominated dibenzofurans and polybrominated dibenzodioxins as breakdown products under certain conditions. For decabromodiphenyl ether, which is the most important of these products, the report cites evidence of persistence in the environment, accumulation in sediment and soil, occupational exposure during manufacturing and formulation, and an insignificant exposure of the general population. Similar risks to the environment were found for octabromodiphenyl ether. For pentabromodiphenyl ether, evidence of environmental hazards and potential human exposure via the food chain supports the conclusion that this product should not be used. In its conclusions, the report stresses the need to minimize environmental contamination with these persistent compounds and their breakdown products. Introduction of such chemicals into widely used products may create a considerable long-term diffuse source of emissions into the environment.
535 _aDC.HQ
546 _aeng.
550 _aWHODOC
561 _aWHO monograph
596 _a4
650 0 2 _aPhenyl ethers
_xadverse effects.
650 0 2 _aEnvironmental exposure.
650 0 2 _aOccupational exposure.
690 _aChemical Toxicology and Carcinogenicity.
710 2 _aWorld Health Organization.
710 2 _aInternational Programme on Chemical Safety.
008 950203s1994 1 0 eng
942 _2NLM
_cMONOGRAPH
999 _c14620
_d14620