Proceedings of the 5th International Seminar of Public Health and Education, ISPHE 2020, 22 July 2020, Universitas Negeri Semarang, Semarang, Indonesia

Research Article

The Effect of Zinc Oxide Dust and Environmental Conditions of Training Ground on Lung Forced Vital Capacity Conditions of Central Java Weighthlifting Athletes

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.22-7-2020.2300279,
        author={Hadi  Hadi and Mustafa Daru Affandi and Syahru  Romadhoni},
        title={The Effect of Zinc Oxide Dust and Environmental Conditions of Training Ground on Lung Forced Vital Capacity Conditions of Central Java Weighthlifting Athletes},
        proceedings={Proceedings of the 5th International Seminar of Public Health and Education, ISPHE 2020, 22 July 2020, Universitas Negeri Semarang, Semarang, Indonesia},
        publisher={EAI},
        proceedings_a={ISPHE},
        year={2020},
        month={9},
        keywords={zinc oxide dust pulmonary physiology weightlifting athletes},
        doi={10.4108/eai.22-7-2020.2300279}
    }
    
  • Hadi Hadi
    Mustafa Daru Affandi
    Syahru Romadhoni
    Year: 2020
    The Effect of Zinc Oxide Dust and Environmental Conditions of Training Ground on Lung Forced Vital Capacity Conditions of Central Java Weighthlifting Athletes
    ISPHE
    EAI
    DOI: 10.4108/eai.22-7-2020.2300279
Hadi Hadi1,*, Mustafa Daru Affandi1, Syahru Romadhoni1
  • 1: Universitas Negeri Semarang
*Contact email: hadi_pabbsi@mail.unnes.ac.id

Abstract

For an athlete, training is an activity that must be done routinely. In training and competi-tion, weightlifting requires chemicals that are used to get rid of slippery hands when lifting weights. That is Zinc Oxide. The poor condition of the training ground causes a decrease in the quality of the physiology of the lungs of the athletes. One reason is that it is sourced from Zinc Oxide dust used during training. Pulmonary physiological disorders were ana-lyzed from Forced Volume Capacity values using a digital spirometer with standard ETS / ARS standard. The sudy result levels of particle dust 17, 921 mg / m3 which exceeds Threshold. From pulmonary physiology measurements, 33.33% of athletes suffer from mild restriction and decrease in pulmonary physiology caused by high levels of Zinc Oxide at the training ground.