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    Occup Med. 1993 Jul-Sep;8(3):519-31.

    Polymer fume fever and other fluorocarbon pyrolysis-related syndromes.

    Source

    Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, University of California, San Francisco.

    Abstract

    Polymer fume fever usually occurs as a self-limited systemic illness with only minor pulmonary symptoms. Like metal fume fever, constitutional signs and symptoms typically present several hours after initial exposure, often giving rise to a misdiagnosis of viral "flu." Compared to metal fume fever, polymer fume fever has a more varied clinical presentation, the severity of which depends upon the specific conditions of exposure. When higher temperatures and/or longer durations of exposure are involved, significant pulmonary involvement, including radiographic consolidation, is a potential complication. Although a number of industrial outbreaks have implicated the smoking of contaminated cigarettes as a vehicle of exposure, any industrial or household activity in which PTFE is heated above 350-400 degrees C puts nearby workers or residents at risk of illness and is to be avoided without strict industrial hygiene controls.

    PMID:
    8272977
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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