Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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
Slate is a metamorphic rock comprising silica,
aluminum
silicates, and small amounts of chlorite, hematite, magnetite, and various carbonates. In the United States slate is quarried in Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, and Vermont. Workers are exposed during mining and processing of the slate and in crushing mills that prepare gravel. We have conducted detailed mineralogic and pathologic studies on the lungs of 12 workers who developed a
pneumoconiosis
while employed in the quarries of west central Vermont and adjacent areas of New York. Perivascular and peribronchial lesions accompanied by interstitial fibrosis and macules were scattered diffusely in the lungs. The lesions were associated with a variable number of silicotic nodules. Scanning electron microscopy combined with energy-dispersive x-ray spectrometry demonstrated
aluminum
and silicon-containing particles with variable cationic constituents and silicon alone in a pattern typical of free crystalline quartz. By x-ray diffraction analysis the majority of the mineral particulates were free crystalline quartz and muscovite, an
aluminum
silicate in the mica group of minerals. Slateworkers are exposed to respirable airborne dust that has the capacity to produce a
pneumoconiosis
that differs from classic silicosis.
...
PMID:Slateworker's pneumoconiosis. 139 38
We investigated the significance of X-ray element analysis of histological sections obtained from 26 patients with
pneumoconiosis
(occupations, etc. mining, quartz processing, metal polishing, exposure to aluminium dust, exposure to asbestos dust).
Aluminium
-containing or, in the case of asbestosis, magnesium-containing silicates were the most commonly found minerals. Iron and titanium were detected in particular in the sections obtained from metal polishers. X-ray micro-analysis permits a more accurate determination of dust exposure, and an improvement in the description of the
pneumoconiosis
presenting.
...
PMID:[Roentgen microanalysis of dust particles in histologic sections of pneumoconiosis]. 236 83
Aluminium
potroom workers have been reported to develop severe
pneumoconiosis
and bronchial hyperreactivity. The influence of inhalation of aluminium oxide and fluorides on the alveolar milieu was studied by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in 14 male non-smoking potroom workers; 28 non-smoking healthy volunteers served as controls. The total numbers, concentrations, and proportions of various alveolar cells did not differ between the groups. The concentrations of albumin and fibronectin in BAL fluid were significantly higher (p less than 0.01 for both) in the exposed workers, reflecting an increased alveolar capillary permeability and an activation of alveolar macrophages (AMs). The concentration of angiotensin converting enzyme, another AM marker, was, however, decreased (p less than 0.01) in the workers. The concentration of hyaluronan, a fibroblast marker, did not differ between the groups. AMs from workers had a decreased capacity (p less than 0.05) to interact with yeast C3b particles but not to ingest them. The expression of HLA-DR and OKM1 on the cell surfaces of AMs were equal in the two groups. The BAL findings were not accompanied by restrictive lung disease in the workers. The fact that only a discrete alveolitis was found in the potroom workers may be due to a low grade of exposure to alumina and fluorides and to frequent use of respiratory protection equipment.
...
PMID:Characteristics of alveolar cells and soluble components in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from non-smoking aluminium potroom workers. 255 78
A siliceous
pneumoconiosis
was detected in two dogs by light microscopical, transmission electron microscopical and elemental analysis methods.
Aluminium
and silicon were the predominant elements and were present in macrophages associated with airways and vessels. The significance and origin of the deposits are discussed.
...
PMID:Siliceous pneumoconiosis in two dogs. 271 1
Aluminoses are widespread forms of trace element deficiency of various severity. The organism is protected against a possible pathogenic influence of
aluminum
by a number of physiological mechanisms the most important among which is a regular urine excretion. A complex of pathological symptoms develops if serious homeostasis disturbances take place e. g. when renal deficiency or direct penetration of the trace element occur. The following forms of aluminosis should be distinguished: 1) simple accumulation in central nervous system which occurs in persons over 65 years; 2)
aluminum
accumulation in Alzheimer disease, in severe form of presenile and senile dementia; 3) dialysis
aluminum
encephalopathy; 4) non-dialysis infantile encephalopathy; 5)
aluminum
encephalopathy in total parenteral nutrition; 6) iatrogenic dialysis
aluminum
osteodystrophy; 7) jatrogenic peritoneal aluminosis; 8)
aluminum
pneumoconiosis
of an occupational origin; 9) bronchospastic syndrome in
aluminum
smelter workers.
...
PMID:[The most important human aluminoses]. 309 Sep 83
The mortality experience of 5,406 men (cohort I) employed at one
aluminum
smelter on Jan. 1, 1950, and 485 men employed at a second plant (cohort II) on Jan. 1, 1951, is reported. For each man, the total number of years of exposure to tars, the number of years since first exposure to tars, and an index of exposure to tars expressed in tar-years were calculated. More than 99% of the men in the first cohort and 98% of the men in the second cohort were traced. Of the 1,539 men in cohort I who were deceased as of December 31, 1977, death certificates were obtained for 1,432 (93%). Of the 92 men in cohort II who were deceased as of December 31, 1977, death certificates were obtained for 80 (87%). The results showed that men in cohort I died of the following causes at approximately the same rate as or less frequently than men of similar age in the Province of Quebec: tuberculosis; circulatory disease; hypertensive heart disease; trauma; leukemia and aleukemia; and malignant neoplasms of the pancreas, genital organs, brain, intestine, and rectum and other abdominal areas. There were no deaths from
pneumoconiosis
or Alzheimer's disease. Although the observed and expected numbers of deaths in some of the cause-of-death categories were small, men in cohort I died of the following causes more frequently than did men of similar age in the Province of Quebec: respiratory disease; pneumonia and bronchitis; malignant neoplasms (all sites); malignant neoplasms of the stomach and esophagus, bladder, and lung; other malignant neoplasms; Hodgkin's disease; and other hypertensive disease. Mortality from malignant neoplasms of the bladder and lung was meaningfully related to numbers of tar-years and of years of exposure. Exposure-response relationships were less clear for malignant neoplasms of the esophagus and stomach and for other malignancies. Mortality from respiratory disease for men with 21 or more tar-years of exposure was approximately twice that of persons never exposed to tars. The apparent excess of other hypertensive disease was restricted to men never exposed to tars. Malignant neoplasm of the lung was the only cause of death in cohort II that was in excess of that expected at Quebec provincial rates.
...
PMID:Mortality of aluminum reduction plant workers, 1950 through 1977. 406 80
A laborer who worked in a steel mill and in a shipyard developed a nonspecific pulmonary interstitial fibrosis. Postmortem samples of his lung were digested, and the inorganic material present was extracted and examined using transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction, and electron microprobe analysis. Uncoated asbestos fibers were present (1.4 X 10(5)/g wet lung), but the surprising finding was the presence of a large number of fly ash particles (6 X 10(6)/g wet lung). Fly ash, the particulate material produced during coal combustion, has not previously been reported to be present in human lung tissue. Although the contribution of the asbestos to this man's lung disease is uncertain, we believe, based on previous studies implicating
aluminum
silicates in
pneumoconiosis
, that the fly ash, an
aluminum
silicate, may be a contributing factor.
...
PMID:Fly ash lung: a new pneumoconiosis? 706
A nonsmoker drill polisher with interstitial lung disease is presented. The environmental exposure was mainly to
aluminum
oxide,
aluminum
silicate, and hard metals. Bronchoalveolar lavage revealed high eosinophilia, and transbronchial biopsy specimen disclosed interstitial pneumonia with giant cell infiltrates and peribronchiolar accumulation of macrophages laden with opaque dust. Mineralogic studies done from the tissue revealed a high concentration of exogenous particles that were identified as hard metals and
aluminum
silicate. These findings are compatible with hard metal
pneumoconiosis
.
...
PMID:Eosinophilic lung reaction to aluminium and hard metal. 816 61
Regulatory control of dust in the workplace has greatly reduced the development of
pneumoconiosis
, yet the prevention of silicosis and coal workers'
pneumoconiosis
has not been accomplished. Cases of
pneumoconiosis
continue to occur, and there is no proven way to affect the natural history of these progressive inflammatory and fibrotic processes. Although
pneumoconiosis
and silicosis are considered untreatable in Western countries, in China an aggressive search has been underway for therapeutic agents and clinical procedures to treat these diseases. The important aspects are reviewed for the tried therapies, including corticosteroids,
aluminum
citrate complex, PVNO, tetrandrine, xinin, and whole lung lavage.
...
PMID:Strategies for the treatment of pneumoconiosis. 845 48
1
2
3
Next >>