Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium

Abstract As other causes decline in importance, chromium-tanned leather has become a more important source for chromium allergy, which affects around 1% of the general population. The aim of this review is to give suggestions on how to minimize the risk of leather-related allergic contact dermatitis...

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Main Author: Yolanda S. Hedberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-07-01
Series:Journal of Leather Science and Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42825-020-00027-y
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spelling doaj-4702fb68c0744bfbb13b6a82fd697b0f2020-11-25T02:18:22ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Leather Science and Engineering2524-78592020-07-012111510.1186/s42825-020-00027-yChromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromiumYolanda S. Hedberg0Division of Surface and Corrosion Science, Department of Chemistry, School of Engineering Sciences in Chemistry, Biotechnology, and Health, KTH Royal Institute of TechnologyAbstract As other causes decline in importance, chromium-tanned leather has become a more important source for chromium allergy, which affects around 1% of the general population. The aim of this review is to give suggestions on how to minimize the risk of leather-related allergic contact dermatitis, which can be elicited in chromium-allergic persons by hexavalent and trivalent chromium released from leather. Hexavalent chromium is the more potent chromium form and requires a lower skin dose to elicit allergic reactions. It is formed on the surface of some, antioxidant-free, leathers at dry conditions (< 35% relative humidity) and is influenced by the tanning process and other conditions, such as UV irradiation, contact with alkaline solutions, and leather age. Trivalent chromium is the dominant form released from chromium-tanned leather and its released amount is sufficient to elicit allergic reactions in some chromium-allergic individuals when they are exposed repetitively and over longer time (days – months). A low initial test result (< 3 mg/kg) for hexavalent chromium with the current standard test (ISO 17075) does not guarantee a low release of chromium from the leather or a low release of hexavalent chromium under typical exposure conditions during the service life of the leather. Information, labels, and certificates regarding leather products are often insufficient to protect chromium-allergic individuals. Correct labelling and information on the possible content of different allergens, as well as different tanning alternatives for certain leather products, are crucial. Graphical abstracthttp://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42825-020-00027-yHexavalent chromiumChromiumContact dermatitisAllergyEczemaRelative humidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yolanda S. Hedberg
spellingShingle Yolanda S. Hedberg
Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
Journal of Leather Science and Engineering
Hexavalent chromium
Chromium
Contact dermatitis
Allergy
Eczema
Relative humidity
author_facet Yolanda S. Hedberg
author_sort Yolanda S. Hedberg
title Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
title_short Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
title_full Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
title_fullStr Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
title_full_unstemmed Chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
title_sort chromium and leather: a review on the chemistry of relevance for allergic contact dermatitis to chromium
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Leather Science and Engineering
issn 2524-7859
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract As other causes decline in importance, chromium-tanned leather has become a more important source for chromium allergy, which affects around 1% of the general population. The aim of this review is to give suggestions on how to minimize the risk of leather-related allergic contact dermatitis, which can be elicited in chromium-allergic persons by hexavalent and trivalent chromium released from leather. Hexavalent chromium is the more potent chromium form and requires a lower skin dose to elicit allergic reactions. It is formed on the surface of some, antioxidant-free, leathers at dry conditions (< 35% relative humidity) and is influenced by the tanning process and other conditions, such as UV irradiation, contact with alkaline solutions, and leather age. Trivalent chromium is the dominant form released from chromium-tanned leather and its released amount is sufficient to elicit allergic reactions in some chromium-allergic individuals when they are exposed repetitively and over longer time (days – months). A low initial test result (< 3 mg/kg) for hexavalent chromium with the current standard test (ISO 17075) does not guarantee a low release of chromium from the leather or a low release of hexavalent chromium under typical exposure conditions during the service life of the leather. Information, labels, and certificates regarding leather products are often insufficient to protect chromium-allergic individuals. Correct labelling and information on the possible content of different allergens, as well as different tanning alternatives for certain leather products, are crucial. Graphical abstract
topic Hexavalent chromium
Chromium
Contact dermatitis
Allergy
Eczema
Relative humidity
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42825-020-00027-y
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