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Query: UMLS:C0037116 (silicosis)
1,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sintered permanent magnets are made from the powdered metals of cobalt, nickel, aluminium, and various rare earths. During production, exposure to respirable crystalline silica and asbestos may also occur. Reported here is a cross sectional study of 310 current and 52 retired hourly employees who worked 10 or more years making sintered magnets. Each participant had a chest radiograph, spirometry, and completed a respiratory questionnaire. Illness logs were also reviewed to calculate the incidence of recorded respiratory disorders. The prevalences of abnormalities in pulmonary function and respiratory symptoms were not higher than found in an external referent population. Although the prevalence of diffuse parenchymal opacities consistent with pneumoconiosis (four workers) was similar to the referent population, one worker had radiographic findings consistent with silicosis and two workers had profusion scores of 1/2 or above, not seen in the referent group. The incidence of reported respiratory conditions in the log, including asthma, was 10 times that of other manufacturers in the same industrial classification category. Excessive exposures to cobalt, nickel, and respirable silica were shown by environmental measurements.
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PMID:Characterisation of respiratory health and exposures at a sintered permanent magnet manufacturer. 191 3

In order to verify the value of the determination of serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACEs) in the assessment of silicosis and silicotuberculosis, we studied 105 subjects: 61 suffering from silicosis, 12 from silicotuberculosis, 19 from tuberculosis and 13 from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The patients with silicosis and silicotuberculosis were classified into two categories on the basis of the radiological pattern of pneumoconiosis according to the ILO 1980 CLASSIFICATION: mild silicosis (from 1/1 to 2/1) and severe silicosis (from 2/2 to 3+ and/or conglomerate masses). ACEs values were higher in the subjects suffering from silicotuberculosis and silicosis; in the latter, however, we did not find any significant relation between ACEs values and the radiological pattern. The lowest values of ACEs were found in the COPD group. Our data showed a statistically significant difference between silicotic or silicotuberculotic patients and the COPD group (p less than 0.05). It can be supposed that COPD, which was also found in all subjects suffering from silicosis or silicotuberculosis, might have caused an underestimation of the observed ACEs values which, however, were higher than normal. This increase might have been caused by a numerical or functional enhancement of the macrophages, which produce ACE and play an important role in the pathogenesis of such diseases.
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PMID:[The evaluation of serum angiotensin-converting enzyme in silicosis and silicotuberculosis]. 196 97

In a sample of 186 stone workers who performed granite "tearing" and "stone work" (either manual or mechanical) we have found silicosis in 50.5% (simple silicosis 47.3%, and complicated silicosis 3.2%). The most commonly found radiologic manifestation was a round opacity type "p" and a 1/1 to 1/3 profusion. From a functional respiratory perspective, a mild reduction of FVC, DLco (SB) and pO2 similar to that described in coal miners' pneumoconiosis was observed. It seems that "stone workers" had a higher incidence of suffering severe silicosis than stone "tearing" workers. Surprisingly, in the analysis of inhaled dust of such an activity which is performed in the open air the rates of dust and SiO2 are much higher than those found in coal workers. We believe that this is the first time that these measurements are performed, and published, in a group of stone workers.
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PMID:[The epidemiology of silicosis in the El Escorial region]. 196 38

Data on 1432 patients with silicosis on a register in Hong Kong were analysed to examine the association of massive fibrosis with possible predisposing factors. Detailed occupational and clinical histories, clinical records, radiographic readings according to the International Standard Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconioses, and environmental dust measurements from hygiene surveys were used to obtain information for several variables--namely, age at first exposure, relative dust exposure level, duration of exposure, smoking, previous recorded history of tuberculosis, and background profusion of small opacities. The most significant risk factors associated with massive fibrosis were high relative dust exposure level, a history of tuberculosis, and increased background profusion of small opacities.
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PMID:Factors associated with massive fibrosis in silicosis. 203 29

The data on airborne dust and occupational disease in the main dust-related industries of the People's Republic of Bulgaria are generalized and analyzed for a period of 15 years. In the ore producing industry is established a stability in the concentration of total and respirable dust 1-2 TWA concentrations and decrease of silica content in dust. The highest occupational hazard is registered in diggers. The levels of TWA total and respirable dust and silica concentrations in the other underground mines as well as in the overground industries are strongly variable and high. Silicosis is still in the first place among dust-related diseases, but mainly among miners of advanced age. The newly detected other pneumoconiosis, asbestosis, mixed pneumoconiosis are already more than the cases of silicotuberculosis. An essential part is taken by the newly detected diffusive pneumosclerosis and dust bronchitis. The distribution of the newly detected occupational lung diseases is studied according to branches of industry.
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PMID:[Dust levels and dust-induced diseases in the main dust-producing industries]. 209 45

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

Electron spin resonance (ESR) measurements show that grinding of quartz particles in air produces silicon-based (Si. and SiO.) radicals which decay with aging in air. ESR spin trapping measurements provide evidence for the generation of hydroxyl and possibly superoxide radicals from a suspension of fresh quartz particles. The hydroxyl radical generation potential of the fresh quartz particles decreases on storing in ambient air and on the addition of catalase, superoxide dismutase, desferroxamine, or DMSO. Silica-induced lipid peroxidation also decreases on storing the fresh particles in ambient air. These findings suggest that oxygenated radicals play a role in the biochemical mechanism of pneumoconiosis in general and acute silicosis in particular.
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PMID:ESR spin trapping and cytotoxicity investigations of freshly fractured quartz: mechanism of acute silicosis. 216 64

To study the signs of coal worker's pneumoconiosis (CWP) at computed tomography (CT), the authors obtained thoracic CT scans in 170 coal-dust-exposed workers who were concomitantly evaluated with conventional posteroanterior and lateral radiography. The profusion and extent of disease was assessed by means of CT in two groups of miners: group 1 (n = 86), miners with worker's compensation and radiographic evidence of CWP, and group 2(n = 84), miners who had applied for compensation without radiographic evidence of CWP. The CT signs of CWP consisted of micronodules, nodules, and progressive massive fibrosis. The comparative analysis demonstrates the superiority of an optimal CT technique over chest radiography in the evaluation of simple silicosis, with improved sensitivity in the detection of small parenchymal opacities. CT provides additional information on the stage of the disease but also clarifies some ambiguities of the ILO classification of small opacities. CT was equivalent to radiography for complicated silicosis, except in the identification of necrosis. CT evaluations are complementary to plain radiography in the assessment of CWP, and the addition of high-resolution CT is useful in achieving a more accurate evaluation of the small parenchymal opacities.
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PMID:Coal worker's pneumoconiosis: CT assessment in exposed workers and correlation with radiographic findings. 221 70

A series of investigations conducted in different "silicosis-risk" industries using a methodology based on the mathematical theory of pattern recognition has shown that in the given conditions of dust exposure, the probability of contracting pneumoconiosis depends for each individual on a complex influence of many factors, both environmental and intrinsic for the individual. Genetic predisposition was one of the most important factors and while the direction in which a factor influences predisposition was the same in every industry, its relative contribution to predisposition to simple silicosis was different in the studied working populations. So a reliable prediction of the high probability of this form of pneumoconiosis on the basis of such a multifactorial analysis is possible only with respect to specific conditions of a particular industry. The complex of factors determining predisposition to silicotuberculosis is more general: this complex comprises both factors influencing susceptibility to silica dust and specially those influencing susceptibility to tuberculosis. Despite the low prevalence of genetic resistance to pneumoconiosis in working populations, the risk of contracting the disease in modern industrial conditions of relatively low dust exposure is high only for a proportion of workers for whom the genotype of predisposition to silicosis or to silicotuberculosis coincides with a most unfavourable combination of non-genetic factors enhancing this predisposition. In the opinion of the authors, the task of screening off those applicants for a "silicosis-risk" employment for whom the risk may be estimated as high on the basis of the developed methodology, is quite feasible.
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PMID:The principles of predicting the individual risk of silicosis and silicotuberculosis. 836 38

The results of two epidemiologic investigations on dust-related lung diseases are presented. The two studies had different aims and designs. A cross-sectional study was done to investigate the silicosis prevalence in Dutch fine ceramic workers. In the small ceramic workshops in the Gouda region, simple pneumoconiosis is still commonly present (13.3%), whereas the silicosis prevalence in the highly mechanized industries is low (1.7%). Furthermore, heavy smoking seems to enhance the risk for silicosis after long-term exposure to quartz. A case-control study was performed to analyze the relation between dust exposure in the fine ceramic and coal mining industries and lung cancer. No relation between a work history in the dusty trades and lung cancer emerged, and a correlation with a specific histologic tumor cell type could not be demonstrated. Apparently, workers in the Dutch fine ceramic or coal mining industry have no increased risk of developing lung malignancies.
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PMID:Epidemiologic studies of inorganic dust-related lung diseases in The Netherlands. 230 46


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