Journal Article10.1080/10473220050075644
Resolution of sick building syndrome in a high-security facility.
21
TL;DR: The main objective of this article is to serve as a case study for other industrial hygiene professionals' review as a "real world" effort in responding to a facility perceived as "sick" by its occupants.
read more
Abstract: The main objective of this article is to serve as a case study for other industrial hygiene (IH) professionals' review as a "real world" effort in responding to a facility perceived as "sick" by its occupants. As many industrial hygienists do not have extensive backgrounds in evaluating microbial air contaminants or the mechanical function of building HVAC units, the overall intent is to provide "lessons learned" to IH generalists who may be asked to participate in indoor environmental quality (IEQ) surveys. In September 1994, a suspected case of "sick building syndrome" was investigated (with significant airborne fungal loads confirmed) at a communications center after numerous occupants reported upper respiratory disease and/or allergy-type symptoms. The setting was a two-story structure approximately 30 years old, with a normal occupancy load of 350 to 400 persons. In addition to continual structural modifications, the central HVAC air conditioning systems had poor maintenance histories. Inspection of ...
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Fungal pollution of indoor environments and its management.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the current status on biotic indoor air pollution, role of fungi as biological contaminants and their impact on human health in indoor environments, including allergy, infections and toxicity.
271
Disinfection and the prevention of infectious disease
Ann Cozad,Rhonda D. Jones +1 more
TL;DR: Studies conducted in day care centers, long-term care facilities, and laboratories show that disinfectants containing a variety of active ingredients demonstrated efficacy against a broad spectrum of pathogens and interrupted microbial transmission and that the use of disinfectants results in public health benefits.
156
CASE REPORTS Invasive Infection due to Penicillium Species other than P. marneffei
Georgios Lyratzopoulos,Michael Ellis,R. Nerringer,D. W. Denning +3 more
- 01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: Optimal therapy for invasive infection is not established, but surgery may be advisable if possible, and Amphotericin B may be the most effective antifungal drug.
96
Indoor airborne fungal levels in selected comprehensive compartments of the urban utility tunnel in Nanjing, Southeast China
Dingmeng Wu,Ying Zhang,Angui Li,Qiangqiang Kong,Yuefei Li,Shibin Geng,Xian Dong,Yanni Liu,Peng Chen +8 more
TL;DR: The concentration and composition of airborne fungi were investigated with a six-stage impact air microbe sampler and by combining culture and DNA analysis in three typical and representative comprehensive compartments of a utility tunnel in Nanjing.
31
Mold contamination and air handling units.
Stephen C. Wilson,Robert N. Palmatier,Larysa A. Andriychuk,Jared M. Martin,Cynthia A. Jumper,Homer W. Holder,David C. Straus +6 more
TL;DR: Because of the widespread prevalence of Cladosporium sp.
30