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sick building syndrome
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

sick building syndrome

Malaise diagnosed in the early 1980s among office workers and thought to be caused by such pollutants as formaldehyde (from furniture and insulating materials), benzene (from paint), and the solvent trichloroethene, concentrated in air-conditioned buildings. Symptoms include headache, sore throat, tiredness, colds, and flu. Studies have found that it can cause a 40% drop in productivity and a 30% rise in absenteeism.

Work on improving living conditions of astronauts showed that the causes were easily and inexpensively removed by potplants in which interaction is thought to take place between the plant and micro-organisms in its roots. Among the most useful are chrysanthemums (counteracting benzene), English ivy and the peace lily (trichloroethene), and the spider plant (formaldehyde).



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11 era of hypersensitivity to the very real threat of terrorist attacks, that kind of marketing is beyond just poor taste.
Although uncommon, BC hypersensitivity (BC thresholds in the nontest ear less than 0 dB) can lead to undermasking if the true thresholds are not used to calculate effective masking levels.
None of 148 patients who tested negative for HLA-B*5701 developed the hypersensitivity reaction; three patients who tested positive took the drug anyway, and all of them did have the reaction.
 
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