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prepared by Syracuse Research Corporation ; prepared for U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry."Under contract no.
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Mutagenicity of vinyl chloride monomer.
Archives belges de medecine sociale, hygiene, medecine du travail et medecine legale. Belgisch archief van sociale geneeskunde, hygiene, arbeidsgeneeskunde en gerechtelijke geneeskunde, 1977info:eu-repo/semantics ...
Hens, Luc +2 more
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Pediatrics, 1974
A 1½-day international symposium was held in New York primarily on liver disease from heavy industrial exposure to vinyl chloride. Worldwide, 19 workers are known to have developed hepatic angiosarcoma: 13 in the United States, two in West Germany, two in Sweden, and one each in Great Britain and Norway.
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A 1½-day international symposium was held in New York primarily on liver disease from heavy industrial exposure to vinyl chloride. Worldwide, 19 workers are known to have developed hepatic angiosarcoma: 13 in the United States, two in West Germany, two in Sweden, and one each in Great Britain and Norway.
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Pharmacokinetics of vinyl chloride in the rat
Toxicology, 1977When rats are exposed to [14C]vinyl chloride in a closed system, the vinyl chloride present in the atmosphere equilibrates with the animals' organism within 15 min. The course of equilibration could be determined using rats which had been given 6-nitro-1,2,3-benzothiadiazole. This compound completely blocks metabolism of vinyl chloride.
H M, Bolt +3 more
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2000
Abstract Vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) is used principally for the production of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), a huge industry that began in the United States in the early 1940s. U.S. production of VCM in 1986 alone was estimated as 8.5 billion pounds, mostly for PVC resins (6).
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Abstract Vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) is used principally for the production of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), a huge industry that began in the United States in the early 1940s. U.S. production of VCM in 1986 alone was estimated as 8.5 billion pounds, mostly for PVC resins (6).
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Measurement of atmospheric vinyl chloride
American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal, 1979Methods for atmospheric vinyl chloride measurement have been reviewed. The lowest detection limits and most specific measurement are achieved by scrubbing atmospheric samples with activated charcoal, desorbing the vinyl chloride, and assaying it by gas chromatography (GC).
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