Butanone (MEK)
Interpretive data for breath butanone
WEL: 200 ppm (8h TWA) Skin notation
Other names: methylethylketone, MEK
Context
This information sheet provides interpretation of breath solvent
values obtained using the Bio-VOC™ breath sampler. Further
information regarding the implementation of a biological monitoring
strategy can be found in HSE's 'Biological
monitoring in the workplace booklet.
Sampling
Samples should be taken approximately 10 minutes post-shift in
a 'clean' area, such as medical room, office or
canteen. Refer to the Breath Sampling Instructions for
details of how to take samples.
The initial half-life of butanone in breath is about 5 minutes,
followed by a second half-life of around 50 minutes. End of
shift sampling will therefore not reflect exposure over the entire
shift but rather the last hour or two.
Interpretation
The HSE Bio-VOC sampler has been used in a field survey of
workers in the shoe manufacturing industry. Workers provided
post-shift breath and urine samples that were analysed for
butanone. The correlation between breath and urine indicated
that the breath butanone equivalent of a urine sample at the
current guidance value (1) would be ~280 nmol/l.
In a volunteer study conducted at HSL (2), four hours'
exposure at the WEL resulted in mean post-exposure breath levels of
~200 nmol/l.
Recommendations
- If breath butanone levels are below 100 nmol/l and exposure is
uniform throughout the shift, exposure is likely to be below the
WEL. A suggested biological monitoring strategy is once
yearly, providing no change in working practices.
- If breath butanone levels exceed 100 nmol/l, peak levels of
exposure may approach the WEL. Analysis of a post-shift urine
sample for butanone is recommended to give a more accurate
comparison with the WEL, by reference to the UK guidance
value.
- If breath butanone levels exceed 300 nmol/l, it is likely that
butanone exposure exceeds the WEL for at least part of the
shift. A routine monitoring strategy using urinary butanone
measurements is recommended.
- If exposure is intermittent, task-related sampling is
recommended. Breath samples should be taken within 10 minutes of
completing tasks with the potential for high exposure.
Other Biological Monitoring
Other means of biological monitoring include butanone in urine
(for which there is a biological monitoring guidance
value).
Exposure Control
Butanone can be absorbed by inhalation or skin absorption of
either the liquid solvent or solvent vapours (2).
References
- Workplace
Exposure Limits (EH40)
- Brooke I et al. Ann Occup Hyg 1998 Nov;42(8):531-40 (http://annhyg.oxfordjournals.org/content/42/8/531.long).
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