Inhalation of
n-hexane at 5000 ppm for 10 minutes produces marked vertigo; 2500-1000 ppm for 12 hours produces
drowsiness,
fatigue, loss of appetite, and
paresthesia in the distal extremities; 2500–5000 ppm produces muscle weakness, cold pulsation in the extremities, blurred vision,
headache, and
anorexia. Chronic occupational exposure to elevated levels of
n-hexane has been demonstrated to be associated with
peripheral neuropathy in
auto mechanics in the US, and
neurotoxicity in workers in printing presses, and shoe and furniture factories in Asia, Europe, and North America. The US
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has set a
recommended exposure limit (REL) for hexane isomers (not
n-hexane) of 100 ppm () over an 8-hour workday. However, for
n-hexane, the current NIOSH REL is 50 ppm () over an 8-hour workday. This limit was proposed as a
permissible exposure limit (PEL) by the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration in 1989; however, this PEL was overruled in US courts in 1992. The current n-hexane PEL in the US is 500 ppm ().
n-Hexane is sometimes used as a
denaturant for alcohol, and as a cleaning agent in the
textile,
furniture, and leather industries. It is slowly being replaced with other solvents. Like gasoline, hexane is highly volatile and is an explosion risk.
Incidents The 1981
Louisville sewer explosions, which destroyed over of sewer lines and streets in the Kentucky city, were caused by ignition of hexane vapors which had been illegally discharged from a
soybean processing plant owned by
Ralston-Purina. Hexane was attributed as the cause of an explosion that occurred in the
National University of Río Cuarto, Argentina on 5 December 2007, due to a hexane spill near a heat-producing machine that exploded, producing a fire that killed one student and injured 24 more.
Occupational hexane poisoning has occurred with Japanese sandal workers, Italian shoe workers, Taiwan press proofing workers, and others. Analysis of
Taiwanese workers has shown occupational exposure to substances including
n-hexane. In 2010–2011, Chinese workers manufacturing
iPhones were reported to have suffered hexane poisoning.
Biotransformation n-Hexane is biotransformed to
2-hexanol and further to
2,5-hexanediol in the body. The conversion is catalyzed by the
enzyme cytochrome P450 utilizing oxygen from air. 2,5-Hexanediol may be further oxidized to
2,5-hexanedione, which is
neurotoxic and produces a
polyneuropathy. ==See also==