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Query: UMLS:C0032273 (
pneumoconiosis
)
1,578
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A simple
pneumoconiosis
with lamellar birefringent crystals was observed in animals dying in the San Diego Zoo. We studied 100 autopsies from 11 mammalian and eight avian species. In mammals, mild pulmonary lesions comprised crystal-laden macrophages in alveoli and lymphatics.
Interstitial fibrosis
was present in 20% of cases. There were no nodules. In birds, dust retention produced large granulomas around tertiary bronchi without fibrosis. Mineralogic analysis using scanning and transmission electron microscopy showed most of the crystals to be silicates. Ninety percent were complex silicates, with aluminum-potassium silicates comprising 70% of the analyzed particles. Electron and x-ray diffraction showed the silicates to be muscovite mica and its hydrothermal degradation product, ie, illite clay. This mica was also present on filtration membranes of atmospheric air samples obtained from the San Diego Zoo. The amount of dust retention was related to the animal's age, anatomic or ecologic variances, and length of stay in the San Diego Zoo. Its semidesert atmosphere is rich in silicates, which are inhaled and deposited in the lungs. Similar mica-induced lesions are found in humans living in this region or the Southwest of the USA. This simple
pneumoconiosis
is likely to be widespread in human populations living in desert or semidesert climates.
...
PMID:Comparative pathology of silicate pneumoconiosis. 22 47
Interstitial pulmonary fibrosis
in developing countries is now diagnosed with an increased frequency. Increased awareness and more frequent availability of computed tomography and fiberoptic bronchoendoscopy have helped in making the diagnosis more often. The spectrum of diseases causing pulmonary fibrosis is broadly similar to that seen in the West. Connective tissue disorders such as systemic sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis and sarcoidosis are more common causes. Idiopathic fibrosis is seen in approximately half the patients.
Pneumoconiosis
such as silicosis are also important. Diagnosis is often established on the basis of clinical features and radiologic findings alone. Transbronchial lung biopsy is used as a frequent method to make histologic diagnosis. Some of the causes described from India are rather rare. One of the interesting examples included a patient in whom pulmonary fibrosis was related to his ascent to very high altitude. Extreme cold, solar radiation, and other factors complicating low atmospheric oxygen pressure were implicated as causative factors. Lung fibrosis, secondary to exposure to toxic gas (methyl isocyanate), is reported in survivors of the Bhopal gas leakage tragedy of 1984. Serial bronchoalveolar studies have show elevated fibronectin levels and the presence of macrophage-neutrophilic exudate in the lavage fluid.
...
PMID:Incidence and recognition of interstitial pulmonary fibrosis in developing countries. 933 41
To investigate the disease process of
pneumoconiosis
induced by welding-fume exposure, a lung fibrosis model was established by building a stainless steel arc welding fume generation system and exposing male Sprague-Dawley rats for 90 days. The rats were exposed to welding fumes with concentrations of 57-67 mg/m3 (low dose) and 105-118 mg/m3 (high dose) total suspended particulates for 2 h per day in an inhalation chamber for 90 days. The concentrations of the main metals, Fe, Mn, Cr, and Ni, were measured in the welding fumes, plus the gaseous compounds, including nitrous gases and ozone, were monitored. During the exposure period, the animals were sacrificed after the initial 2-h exposure and after 15, 30, 60, and 90 days. Histopathological examinations were conducted on the animals' upper respiratory tract, including the nasal pathway and conducting airway, plus the gas exchange region, including the alveolar ducts, alveolar sacs, and alveoli. When compared to the control group, the lung weights did not increase significantly in the low-dose group, yet in the high-dose group there was a significant increase from day 15 to day 90. The histopathological examination combined with fibrosis-specific staining (Masson's trichrome) indicated that the lungs in the low-dose group did not exhibit any progressive fibrotic changes. Whereas, the lungs in the high-dose group exhibited early delicate fibrosis from day 15, which progressed into the perivascular and peribronchiolar regions by day 30.
Interstitial fibrosis
appeared at day 60 and became prominent by day 90, along with the additional appearance of pleural fibrosis. Accordingly, it would appear that a significant dose of welding-fume exposure was required to induce lung fibrosis.
...
PMID:Lung fibrosis in Sprague-Dawley rats, induced by exposure to manual metal arc-stainless steel welding fumes. 1150 49
Welders with radiographic
pneumoconiosis
abnormalities have exhibited a gradual clearing of the X-ray identified effects following removal from exposure. In some cases, the pulmonary fibrosis associated with welding fumes appears in a more severe form in welders. Accordingly, to investigate the disease and recovery process of
pneumoconiosis
induced by welding-fume exposure, rats were exposed to welding fumes with concentrations of 63.6+/-4.1 mg/m(3) (low dose) and 107.1+/-6.3 mg/m(3) (high dose) of total suspended particulate for 2 h per day in an inhalation chamber for a total of 2 h or 15, 30, 60 or 90 days. Thereafter, the rats were no longer exposed and allowed to recover from the welding fume-induced lung fibrosis for 90 days. When compared to the unexposed control group, the lung weights significantly increased in both the low- and high-dose rats from day 15 to 90. A histopathological examination combined with fibrosis-specific staining revealed that the lungs from the low-dose rats did not exhibit any significant progressive fibrotic changes. Whereas, the lungs from the high-dose rats exhibited early delicate fibrosis from day 15, which progressed into the perivascular and peribronchiolar regions by day 30.
Interstitial fibrosis
appeared at day 60 and became prominent by day 90, along with the additional appearance of pleural fibrosis. Recovery, evaluated based on the body and lung weights and a histopathological examination, was observed in both the high and low-dose rats that were exposed up to 30 days. The rats exposed for 60-90 days at the low dose also recovered from the fibrosis, yet the rats exposed for 60-90 days at the high dose did not fully recover. Consequently, recovery from
pneumoconiosis
induced by welding-fume exposure was observed when the degree of exposure was short-term and moderate.
...
PMID:Recovery from manual metal arc-stainless steel welding-fume exposure induced lung fibrosis in Sprague-Dawley rats. 1284 85