WAC 296-155-17341
Appendix A to WAC 296-155-173--Substance data sheet, for
4-4'-methylenedianiline. (1) Substance identification.
(a) Substance: Methylenedianiline (MDA).
(b) Permissible exposure:
(i) Airborne: Ten parts per billion parts of air (10
ppb), time-weighted average (TWA) for an eight-hour workday
and an action level of five parts per billion parts of air (5
ppb).
(ii) Dermal: Eye contact and skin contact with MDA are
not permitted.
(c) Appearance and odor: White to tan solid; amine odor.
(2) Health hazard data.
(a) Ways in which MDA affects your health. MDA can
affect your health if you inhale it or if it comes in contact
with your skin or eyes. MDA is also harmful if you happen to
swallow it. Do not get MDA in eyes, on skin, or on clothing.
(b) Effects of overexposure.
(i) Short-term (acute) overexposure: Overexposure to MDA
may produce fever, chills, loss of appetite, vomiting,
jaundice. Contact may irritate skin, eyes, and mucous
membranes. Sensitization may occur.
(ii) Long-term (chronic) exposure. Repeated or prolonged
exposure to MDA, even at relatively low concentrations, may
cause cancer. In addition, damage to the liver, kidneys,
blood, and spleen may occur with long-term exposure.
(iii) Reporting signs and symptoms: You should inform
your employer if you develop any signs or symptoms which you
suspect are caused by exposure to MDA including yellow
staining of the skin.
(3) Protective clothing and equipment.
(a) Respirators. Respirators are required for those
operations in which engineering controls or work practice
controls are not adequate or feasible to reduce exposure to
the permissible limit. If respirators are worn, they must be
certified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety
and Health (NIOSH) under 42 CFR part 84, and cartridges or
canisters must be replaced as necessary to maintain the
effectiveness of the respirator. If you experience difficulty
breathing while wearing a respirator, you may request a
positive-pressure respirator from your employer. You must be
thoroughly trained to use the assigned respirator, and the
training will be provided by your employer. MDA does not have
a detectable odor except at levels well above the permissible
exposure limits. Do not depend on odor to warn you when a
respirator canister is exhausted. If you can smell MDA while
wearing a respirator, proceed immediately to fresh air. If
you experience difficulty breathing while wearing a
respirator, tell your employer.
(b) Protective clothing. You may be required to wear
coveralls, aprons, gloves, face shields, or other appropriate
protective clothing to prevent skin contact with MDA. Where
protective clothing is required, your employer is required to
provide clean garments to you, as necessary, to assure that
the clothing protects you adequately. Replace or repair
impervious clothing that has developed leaks. MDA should
never be allowed to remain on the skin. Clothing and shoes
which are not impervious to MDA should not be allowed to
become contaminated with MDA, and if they do, the clothing and
shoes should be promptly removed and decontaminated. The
clothing should be laundered to remove MDA or discarded. Once
MDA penetrates shoes or other leather articles, they should
not be worn again.
(c) Eye protection. You must wear splashproof safety
goggles in areas where liquid MDA may contact your eyes. Contact lenses should not be worn in areas where eye contact
with MDA can occur. In addition, you must wear a face shield
if your face could be splashed with MDA liquid.
(4) Emergency and first-aid procedures.
(a) Eye and face exposure. If MDA is splashed into the
eyes, wash the eyes for at least fifteen minutes. See a
doctor as soon as possible.
(b) Skin exposure. If MDA is spilled on your clothing or
skin, remove the contaminated clothing and wash the exposed
skin with large amounts of soap and water immediately. Wash
contaminated clothing before you wear it again.
(c) Breathing. If you or any other person breathes in
large amounts of MDA, get the exposed person to fresh air at
once. Apply artificial respiration if breathing has stopped. Call for medical assistance or a doctor as soon as possible. Never enter any vessel or confined space where the MDA
concentration might be high without proper safety equipment
and at least one other person present who will stay outside. A life line should be used.
(d) Swallowing. If MDA has been swallowed and the
patient is conscious, do not induce vomiting. Call for
medical assistance or a doctor immediately.
(5) Medical requirements. If you are exposed to MDA at a
concentration at or above the action level for more than
thirty days per year, or exposed to liquid mixtures more than
fifteen days per year, your employer is required to provide a
medical examination, including a medical history and
laboratory tests, within sixty days of the effective date of
this standard and annually thereafter. These tests shall be
provided without cost to you. In addition, if you are
accidentally exposed to MDA (either by ingestion, inhalation,
or skin/eye contact) under conditions known or suspected to
constitute toxic exposure to MDA, your employer is required to
make special examinations and tests available to you.
(6) Observation of monitoring. Your employer is required
to perform measurements that are representative of your
exposure to MDA and you or your designated representative are
entitled to observe the monitoring procedure. You are
entitled to observe the steps taken in the measurement
procedure and to record the results obtained. When the
monitoring procedure is taking place in an area where
respirators or personal protective clothing and equipment are
required to be worn; you and your representative must also be
provided with, and must wear, the protective clothing and
equipment.
(7) Access to records. You or your representative are
entitled to see the records of measurements of your exposure
to MDA upon written request to your employer. Your medical
examination records can be furnished to your physician or
designated representative upon request by you to your
employer.
(8) Precautions for safe use, handling, and storage.
(a) Material is combustible. Avoid strong acids and
their anhydrides. Avoid strong oxidants. Consult supervisor
for disposal requirements.
(b) Emergency clean-up. Wear self-contained breathing
apparatus and fully clothe the body in the appropriate
personal protective clothing and equipment.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 49.17.010, [49.17].040 and[49.17].050
. 99-10-071, § 296-155-17341, filed 5/4/99,
effective 9/1/99. Statutory Authority: Chapter 49.17 RCW. 93-04-111 (Order 92-15), § 296-155-17341, filed 2/3/93,
effective 3/15/93.]