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Query: UMLS:C0037116 (
silicosis
)
1,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mortality patterns of United Kingdom tin miners were examined in relation to calendar period and duration of underground work with particular attention to lung cancer and exposure to radon. Subjects were all men who had worked for at least one year between 1941 and 1984 at one of two United Kingdom tin mines and for whom a complete work history could be constructed from mine records. Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) were calculated using national (England and Wales) rates. The pattern of SMRs in relation to potential explanatory variables was analysed using Poisson regression methods. Mortalities from lung cancer and
silicosis
(including silicotuberculosis) were significantly raised and showed a significant relation with duration of underground work (mortality from
stomach cancer
was raised in both underground and surface workers, but not significantly). Excess mortality from silica related disease declined steeply from 35% among workers first exposed before 1920 to 1% among those first exposed after 1950. Thirteen surface workers with known exposure to arsenic had high rates of lung and
stomach cancer
. The SMR for lung cancer showed a consistent pattern in relation to duration of underground exposure, rising from 83 (observed/expected = 8/9.6) for surface workers (without exposure to arsenic) to 447 (15/3.4) for workers with more than 30 years underground exposure. Examination of the SMR for lung cancer by total underground exposure, age, and time since last exposure gave rise to a model for the expression of risk which depends only on total exposure and time since exposure. The fitted model implies that the effect of exposure to radon in a given year has no effect on risk for 10 years, then rapidly rises to a maximum from which the excess risk then declines, halving every 4.3 years. There were no direct measurements of historic radon levels. A conservative estimate based on measurements taken since 1969 by the National Radiological Protection Board and the Mines and Quarries Inspectorate is that the annual dose to an underground worker was about 10 working level months (WLM). Given this assumption, the risk/exposure slope implied by the present data, and the model fitted to it, was somewhat lower than that given in the fourth Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionisation Radiation (BEIR IV) report (about 40% lower for lifetime exposures). The present data also imply different risks depending on the age at exposure, with relatively higher lifetime risks for exposure at older ages, and relatively lower risks for exposures at younger ages. In conclusion, there was a clear relation between exposure to radon and death from lung cancer. The relative risk of lung cancer due to exposure to radon was not constant in cessation of exposure. The lifetime excess risk of lung cancer implied by these data for 40 years exposure at the current statutory limit of four WLM a year starting at age 20, was about 8% (79 excess deaths per 1000 exposed), assuming average smoking habits among the exposed workers. Control of dust concentrations in the mines has substantially reduced--and may have eliminated--direct mortality from silica related disease.
...
PMID:Mortality of a cohort of tin miners 1941-86. 222 59
The mortality experience of 1190 miners and 289 surface industry workers receiving workers' compensation awards for
silicosis
in Ontario since 1940 has been studied up to mid-1985. Both groups were found to have a significantly increased mortality from lung cancer (miners' SMR: 230; surface workers' SMR: 302) and
stomach cancer
(miners' SMR: 188; surface workers' SMR: 366). Adjustment for smoking and country of origin did not explain the excesses observed. The lung cancer findings are consistent with observations from
silicosis
registries in Europe. Possible explanatory factors are discussed.
...
PMID:Mortality among workers receiving compensation awards for silicosis in Ontario 1940-85. 295 10
In 1950-1960, a cohort of dust-exposed workers and a cohort of multiple matched unexposed subjects was set up from the files of preventive medical checkups performed in 1,089 Viennese plants. Male workers with a history of long-term exposure to nonfibrous particulates in different industries (metal, ceramics, brick, glass, stone etc.) aged greater than or equal to 40, and male workers without dust exposure (matched for residency, start of observation, age, and smoking) were followed up to 1980 or death (48,960 person yr). By life table methods, dust-exposed workers compared to unexposed workers showed a reduced survival of age 60 (p less than 0.0001), due to lung cancer (123 exposed, 87 controls, p = 0.001),
stomach cancer
(48/27, p = 0.003),
silicosis
(40/0), emphysema, bronchitis and asthma (41/23, p = 0.007). No difference in mortality from cardiovascular diseases was observed (p greater than 0.50). We concluded that heavy and long term exposure to respirable particulates is related to increased lung cancer mortality after age 60. A comparison of 2,212 deaths among Austrian silicotics, with deaths in the corresponding population showed a relation between lung cancer and
silicosis
(p less than 0.001), fairly independent of age and time-period. The estimated relative lung cancer risk of Austrian silicotics in the period 1955-79 averaged 1.41 (95% confidence 1.21-1.64).
...
PMID:Long-term effect of occupational dust exposure. 320 94
In a retrospective cohort mortality study of 10,403 Minnesota iron-ore (hematite) miners no excesses of lung cancer mortality were found among either underground (Standardized mortality ratio [SMR] = 100) or above ground (SMR = 88) miners. Yugoslav-born miners incurred a two-fold significant excess mortality for lung cancer that did not appear to be associated with their mining exposures. Significant excesses in mortality due to
stomach cancer
were found for both underground (SMR = 167) and aboveground (SMR = 181) miners as compared with U.S. white males. However, except among Finnish-born miners, these excesses disappeared when comparisons were made with the appropriate county rate. The apparent absence of significant radon exposure, a strict smoking prohibition underground, an aggressive
silicosis
control program, and the absence of underground diesel fuel use may explain why these underground miners did not appear to incur the lung cancer risk reported in other studies.
...
PMID:A retrospective cohort mortality study of iron ore (hematite) miners in Minnesota. 403 88
The main features of occupational industrial respiratory diseases in Switzerland can be summarized as follows: -
Silicosis
: 9750 cases from 1930 to 1979. At present low annual incidence (less than 100 cases), age at first diagnosis over 40 years, at death almost 70 years. - Asbestosis: 130 cases from 1939 to 1979. 30 cases of mesothelioma (21 without asbestosis; 9 with), 9 of bronchial carcinoma and 1 of
gastric cancer
in the 130 cases of asbestosis. - Acute toxic lung (irritant gases such as chlorine, phosgene, nitrous gases), occupational asthma, extrinsic alveolitis and finally occupational chronic bronchitis are the principal diseases also observed.
...
PMID:[Current occupational respiratory pathology in Switzerland]. 707 2
The cancer incidence among asbestos workers in the Sennan District and its surrounding of Osaka Prefecture, Japan, and the results of a mass survey in the above area since 1957 were evaluated from view points of epidemiology. During the period from 1953 to 1979, 107 patients with asbestosis were admitted to this Hospital. Twenty-six (24%) of them died of various carcinoma; 21 had lung cancer, 2 pleural mesothelioma and 3 had
stomach cancer
. Respiratory insufficiency due to pulmonary asbestosis was responsible for 41 deaths (38%). by a cohort survey of the 297 asbestos workers in the same district, 4 cases of lung cancer, and 3 cases of
gastric cancer
were detected and cases of cohort survey were followed up for 19 years. Fifty-seven (10%) of 556 cases of
silicosis
and 14 (11%) of 125 cases of pneumoconiosis other than
silicosis
or asbestosis were found to have lung cancer, but no mesothelioma. These results indicate that lung cancer and mesothelioma are associated more frequently with asbestosis than with non-asbestos pneumoconiosis (p less than 0.001 as tested by chi2-test). The standardized mortality ratio of lung and
stomach cancer
among the inhabitants of the Sennan District was calculated based on the statistics during the period of 10 years (1968-1977). the ratio of observed death to expected death of both cancers was smaller than 1.1, and there was no significant increase of death of lung and
stomach cancer
, although the risk of lung cancer tended to increase among male inhabitants. Discussions were made on the problems related to asbestos industry.
...
PMID:Asbestos and cancer in the Sennan District of Osaka. 731 84