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Query: UMLS:C0032273 (pneumoconiosis)
1,578 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Both angular and fibrous SiC (carborundum) particulates can be emitted by SiC production operations. Carborundum pneumoconiosis is now recognized as an occupational lung disease with specific pathological features. These were previously reproduced in the sheep model of pneumoconiosis with fibrous SiC but not with angular SiC. To further document this question, the pulmonary retention in the sheep of the two morphological types was studied. Animals were injected in the tracheal lobe with equal mass (100 mg) of particulates prepared from SiC materials taken in the field. Particles were measured by analytical transmission electron microscopy in samples of bronchoalveolar lavage fluids (BAL) obtained at months 2, 4, 6 and 8 after the injection. They were also measured in samples of lung parenchyma obtained at month 8. Measurements in BAL and in lung samples both indicated a much lower retention for fibrous than for angular SiC. The retention rate in lung parenchyma at month 8 was 30 times lower for fibrous SiC. The half-life of decrease of concentrations was 3.4 times shorter for fibrous SiC. Other data in the literature support the notion that fine fibres are cleared more effectively than coarser angular particles.
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PMID:Pulmonary clearance of fibrous and angular SiC particulates in the sheep model of pneumoconiosis. 144 71

Hard metal pneumoconiosis is a recently recognized occupational lung disease associated with the exposure to cobalt fumes in the workplace. Chronic exposure in susceptible individuals results in interstitial lung disease histopathologically manifested as interstitial fibrosis with an associated mononuclear cell infiltrate and the presence of "cannibalistic" multinucleated giant cells in the alveolar airspaces. The majority of patients present with symptoms of chronic cough and dyspnea. Interestingly, in addition, patients uniformly report significant weight loss out of proportion to their degree of respiratory impairment. In this case report we demonstrate the association of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) and hard metal (cobalt) pneumoconiosis and suggest that TNF may have a potential role in the etiology of the constitutional symptoms and the pathogenesis of interstitial lung disease.
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PMID:Hard metal pneumoconiosis and the association of tumor necrosis factor-alpha. 145 82

Dust exposure and pneumoconiosis were investigated in a South African pottery that manufactured wall tiles and bathroom fittings. This paper describes the objectives of the investigation and presents dust measurement data. x Ray diffraction showed that the clays used by the pottery had a high quartz content (range 58%-23%, mean 38%). Exposure to respirable dust was measured for 43 workers and was highest (6.6 mg/m3) in a bathroom fitting fettler. Quartz concentrations in excess of 0.1 mg/m3 were found in all sections of the manufacturing process from slip production to biscuit firing and sorting. The proportion of quartz in the respirable dust of these sections was 24% to 33%. This is higher than is usually reported in English potteries. Four hundred and six (80%) of the 509 workers employed at the pottery were potentially at risk of occupational lung disease. The finding of large numbers of pottery workers exposed to unacceptable dust concentrations is not surprising as poor dust control was found in all six wall tile and sanitary ware factories surveyed by the National Centre for Occupational Health between 1973 and 1989. Dust related occupational disease can be expected in potters for many years to come.
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PMID:Dust exposure and pneumoconiosis in a South African pottery. 1. Study objectives and dust exposure. 163 5

The authors have carried out a statistical analysis of cases of occupational asthma and other occupational lung diseases submitted to the Ministry of Labour in Quebec between 1986 and 1988. The total number of claims was 913, 993, and 866 respectively for the 3 years of which 61% to 71% were accepted. 41% to 55% were new assessments. Of 228 new claims accepted in 1988, 81 (36%) were for occupational asthma. This number surpassed the number of claims accepted for traditional pneumoconiosis (asbestos = 30, and silicose = 36). Isocyanates were the principle cause of occupational asthma (23% of cases were recognised in 1988) followed by flour, red and white cedar, snow crab process workers, and various pharmaceutical products and grains. In comparison with statistics in 1977, one noticed there was a large reversal of the frequency of certain occupational lung diseases that are recognised, because at that time asbestosis and silicosis were the principle causes of claims put forward and accepted. The authors discuss the statistical bias of occupational lung disease obtained by medico-legal agencies. Although occupational asthma has not been the object of the systematic screening program in the work place and although there is a tendency for workers to avoid or abandon their occupation more often than in the traditional pneumoconioses current protection is sufficient in Quebec to motivate individuals who are possibly suffering from occupational asthma to put in a claim for compensation.
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PMID:[Medico-legal statistics on occupational asthmna in Quebec between 1986 and 1988]. 214 54

Radiology is extremely important in the diagnosis of occupational lung disease. Owing to its general availability and international comparability, the roentgenographic pa view of the chest obtained by the high-voltage technique is still the basis of the radiologic examination. Supplementary investigations are necessary for medical reasons, however, as well as for documentation of experts' certification. Valuable diagnostic information is supplied by oblique views of the thorax and by conventional X-ray tomography, though not by scintigraphic examinations or - up to now - by digital luminescence radiography. Ultrasound helps in the differentiation of free pleural fluid, organized pleural effusion, and pleural malignancy. In addition, computed tomography (CT) can be guided by ultrasound. CT has emerged as the method of choice for examination and for support of medical experts' certification of pneumoconiotic pleural disease, and high-resolution CT (HRCT) is also increasing used for examination of pneumoconiotic lung foci as well. Diagnostic accuracy in pneumoconiosis is further improved by shorter CT scanning times in combination with HRCT.
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PMID:[Radiologic diagnosis of pneumoconioses]. 229 Sep 26

Indices of the maximal forced expiration are the most widely adopted method of screening for occupational lung disease because of their ease of measurement, employee acceptability, and reproducibility. However, these indices may lack sensitivity, specificity, or validity in detecting cases of some occupational lung diseases at asymptomatic stages when intervention may affect outcome. In populations at increased risk for occupational asthma, pneumoconiosis, or hypersensitivity pneumonitis, three other types of screening are being evaluated in field settings: tests for bronchial hyperreactivity, barriers to diffusion, and abnormalities in gas distribution in the lung. The potential methods of screening--cold air challenge, methacholine challenge, peak flow logs, diffusing capacity, and single breath nitrogen tests--await clinical trials in industrial settings to evaluate whether early case finding of susceptible subjects can result in prevention of morbidity.
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PMID:Approaches to assessing pulmonary dysfunction and susceptibility in workers. 352 35

Surface coalminers are generally thought to be at minimal risk of developing pneumoconiosis. Biopsy-proved silicoproteinosis was found in a 34-year-old surface coalmine driller, and two of nine other drill crew members who worked for the same company had chest radiographic findings compatible with simple silicosis. Reanalysis of data from a previous United States Public Health Service survey of surface coalminers, after exclusion of those with underground mining experience, showed that 38% of the cases of pneumoconiosis occurred in drill crew members, a group comprising only 11% of the study population. On the basis of these data surface coalmine drillers appear to have an increased risk of developing occupational lung disease.
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PMID:Silicosis in surface coalmine drillers. 686 80

This paper reports a study comparing the forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiration volume in one second (FEV1) of 684 workers grouped according to smoking habits and to disability from pneumoconiosis. The study was longitudinal and, although the pulmonary function tests decreased with age, as expected, the fall was greater in smokers without occupational lung disease than in non-smokers with occupational lung disease.
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PMID:The relative importance of smoking compared to occupation in decreased pulmonary function. 706 80

The relative activation of eicosanoid production which results from the exposure of the alveolar macrophage (AM) to mineral dusts is thought to be a key factor in the pathophysiology of occupational lung disease. We compared in vitro basal and silica-stimulated production of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and thromboxane A2 (TXA2) by AM from normal humans and non-human primates (Macaca nemestrina). In addition, we instilled mineral dusts directly into one lung of the non-human primate and evaluated AM eicosanoid production at two week intervals following dust instillation. Unstimulated AM from humans produce more PGE2 and TXA2 than do AM from M. nemestrina. However, in vitro exposure of AM from both species to silica dust produced a qualitatively similar increase in TXA2 production accompanied by no change in PGE2 production. Sequential analysis of AM eicosanoid production following a single bolus exposure to bituminous or anthracite coal dusts, titanium dioxide (TiO2) dust or crystalline silica showed marked variability among individual non-human primates in qualitative and quantitative aspects of dust-induced eicosanoid production. However, the rank order of potency of the different dusts (silica > anthracite > bituminous) correlated with epidemiological evidence relating the type of dust mined to the incidence of pneumoconiosis. These studies suggest that the non-human primate may serve as a model for the study of both the role of eicosanoids in the etiology of dust-induced occupational lung disease and the biochemical basis for individual variability in the response of lung cells to mineral dust exposure.
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PMID:Characterization of alveolar macrophage eicosanoid production in a non-human primate model of mineral dust exposure. 823 29

Highlights in the history of efforts to prevent occupational lung disease among coal miners in the United States are reviewed. The Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 is summarized, and the sources and effects of its provisions to prevent coal workers' pneumoconiosis are examined. Descriptions follow of the identification of coal workers' pneumoconiosis as a disease, identification of respirable coal mine dust as its cause, and establishment and enforcement of an exposure limit. The development of prevention efforts focusing on surveillance of both exposure and outcome and of enforcement of dust control methods is examined.
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PMID:From explosions to black lung: a history of efforts to control coal mine dust. 845 42


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