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6137811 
Journal Article 
Review 
Toward safer thanatopraxy cares: formaldehyde-releasers use 
Varlet, V; Bouvet, A; Cadas, H; Hornung, JP; Grabherr, S 
2019 
Yes 
Journal of Anatomy
ISSN: 0021-8782
EISSN: 1469-7580 
235 
863-872 
English 
Human cadavers constitute very useful educational tools to teach anatomy in medical scholarship and related disciplines such as physiology, for example. However, as biological material, human body is subjected to decay. Thanatopraxy cares such as embalming have been developed to slow down and inhibit this decay, but the formula used for the preservation fluids are mainly formaldehyde (FA)-based. Very recently, other formulas were developed in order to replace FA, and to avoid its toxicity leading to important environmental and professional exposure concerns. However, these alternative FA-free fluids are still not validated or commercialized, and their efficiency is still under discussion. In this context, the use of FA-releasing substances, already used in the cosmetics industry, may offer interesting alternatives in order to reduce professional exposures to FA. Simultaneously, the preservation of the body is still guaranteed by FA generated over time from FA-releasers. The aim of this review is to revaluate the use of FA in thanatopraxy cares, to present its benefits and disadvantages, and finally to propose an alternative to reduce FA professional exposure during thanatopraxy cares thanks to FA-releasers use. 
Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics; embalming, formaldehyde, formaldehyde-releaser, human body preservation,; thanatopraxy, tissue fixation; embalming technique, ionic liquids, formalin, anatomy, dissection,; cadavers, preservation, substitute, fixatives, workers 
IRIS
• Formaldehyde [archived]
     HAWC
          Asthma
               Excluded
          Mechanistic inflammation
               Excluded
          Respiratory tract pathology human
               Excluded
     Search Update 2018-2021
          Human Respiratory Pathology
               PubMed
          Immune Section
               PubMed
          Inflammation/Reactive oxygen Species
               PubMed
• IRIS Formaldehyde (Inhalation) [Final 2024]
     Literature Indexing
          PubMed
          2021 Systematic Evidence Map
     Literature Identification
          Respiratory Tract Pathology in Humans
               Excluded
          Immune-Mediated Conditions in Humans, Including Asthma and Allergy
               Excluded
          Inflammation and Immune-Related Mechanistic Studies
               Excluded