Petruccelli B P, Goldenbaum M, Scott B, Lachiver R, Kanjarpane D, Elliott E, Francis M, McDiarmid M A, Deeter D
Division of Preventive Medicine, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Washington, DC, USA.
J Occup Environ Med. 1999 Jun;41(6):433-9. doi: 10.1097/00043764-199906000-00008.
The burning of oil wells in Kuwait in 1991 discharged a high volume of potentially toxic pollutants into the air. To determine whether there were health-related complaints associated with having lived and worked there, questionnaires were administered to 1599 soldiers after their return from a 3-month mission in Kuwait. Symptoms occurring before, during, and after the mission were queried. Compared with baseline, symptoms reported more frequently for the Kuwait period were eye and upper respiratory tract irritation, shortness of breath, cough, rashes, and fatigue. Symptoms were associated with reported proximity to oil fires, and their incidence generally decreased after the soldiers left Kuwait. Oil-fire smoke is one of several possible factors that may have contributed to the reporting of symptoms.
1991年科威特油井燃烧向空气中排放了大量潜在有毒污染物。为了确定在那里生活和工作是否会引发与健康相关的不适,在1599名士兵从科威特执行为期3个月的任务回国后,对他们进行了问卷调查。询问了任务前、任务期间和任务后的症状。与基线相比,在科威特期间报告较多的症状是眼睛和上呼吸道刺激、呼吸急促、咳嗽、皮疹和疲劳。症状与报告的靠近油火的距离有关,士兵离开科威特后这些症状的发生率总体下降。油火烟雾是可能导致症状报告的几个因素之一。