Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032273 (pneumoconiosis)
1,578 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cancer is a worldwide public health problem, accounting for an increasing proportion of all deaths. It is the second leading cause of death in most of the industrialised world, and developing countries appear to be launched on a cancer epidemic, similar to that in industrialised countries. In developing countries, most cancer deaths are due to tumours of the stomach, oesophagus, lung, liver and uterine cervix; occupational cancers account for an undetermined number of these cases. Occupationally associated neoplasms may either be related directly to specific exposures within a workplace, e.g., bladder cancer in benzidine-exposed workers, or reflect indirect factors, including socioeconomic status and conditions of life. Asbestos-induced pneumoconiosis is recognised as an occupational disease in many developing countries, whereas asbestos-related malignancies draw less attention. The rising prevalence of cigarette smoking in these countries greatly magnifies the effect of asbestos in inducing lung cancer. Transplantation of industries from developed to developing countries is often accompanied by a reduction in the standard of working conditions. The rising unemployment in developing countries is unlikely to incite workers to claim better conditions.
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PMID:Occupational cancer in developing and newly industrialized countries. 836 28

Chronic inhalation of quartz-containing dust produces reversible inflammatory changes in lungs resulting in irreversible fibrotic changes termed pneumoconiosis. Due to the inflammatory process in the lungs, highly reactive substances are released that may be detoxified by glutathione S-transferases. Therefore, 90 hard coal miners with pneumoconiosis as a recognized occupational disease (in Germany: Berufskrankheit BK 4101) were genotyped for glutathione S-transferases M1 (GSTM1) and T1 (GSTT1) according to standard methods. Furthermore, occupational exposure and smoking habits were assessed by questionnaire. Changes in a chest x-ray were classified according to ILO classification 2000. Of the investigated hard coal miners 43% were GSTM1 negative whereas 57% were GSTM1 positive. The arithmetic mean of the age at time of investigation was 74.2 yr (range: 42-87 yr). Seventy-four percent of the hard coal miners reported being ever smokers, while 26% denied smoking. All hard coal miners provided pneumoconiosis-related changes in the chest x-ray. The observed frequency of GSTM1 negative hard coal miners was not different from frequencies reported for general Caucasian populations and in agreement with findings reported for Chinese coal miners. In contrast, in a former study, 16 of 19 German hard coal miners (84%) with urinary bladder cancer displayed a GSTM1 negative genotype. The outcome of this study provides evidence that severely occupationally exposed Caucasian hard coal miners do not present an elevated level of GSTM1 negative individuals.
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PMID:Miners compensated for pneumoconiosis and glutathione s-transferases M1 and T1 genotypes. 2268 19