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Query: UMLS:C0037116 (
silicosis
)
1,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A high concentration of silica dust in the air many workstands in ceramic plants is a serious risk for the health of exposed workers. It can cause the development of
silicosis
. The aim of this paper is to evaluate a fibrogenic activity of dusts containing 98% crystalline silica. The ceramic masses have about 25% of Quartz. The samples of 2 lode quartz and 4 sand quartz originated from different mines in
Poland
were used for the experiment. Their physical properties were analysed by X-ray diffraction and SiO2 content was determined by colorimetry. Their biological aggresiveness was characterised by wet weight, hydroxyproline content, lipid level in the lungs and wet weight of mediastinal lymph nodes of rats which were intratracheally given of the dusts. The results show that the tested dusts have a moderated fibrogenic activity. At short time (3 months) after their administration the fibrogenic changes in lungs were different depending on the kind of dusts, but at the 6th month of the experiment they did not differ at all. The exposition of workers to silica dusts is a great occupational hazard.
...
PMID:[Experimental silicosis. I. Fibrogenic activity of quartz material used in the ceramic industry]. 22 82
Mortality study was carried out on the cohort of 11,224 men with coal workers' pneumoconiosis or
silicosis
diagnosed during the period 1970-1985. The cohort was selected from the register of occupational diseases and was traced up to the end of 1991. The general male population of
Poland
was a reference group. The study showed small but significant excess of total mortality (SMR = 115; p < 0.01). The analysis of death causes revealed an elevated mortality from infectious diseases, among which tuberculosis was most prevalent (SMR = 212; p < 0.01) and from pneumoconioses predominant in diseases of the respiratory system, (SMR = 426; p < 0.01) and lung cancer (SMR = 116; p < 0.01). The comparison of the prevalence of smoking in the population under study with that in the reference general male population of
Poland
indicated that this habit is mostly responsible for the excess of lung cancer deaths. This finding contradicts the hypothesis that there is a causal relationship between exposure to dusts containing crystalline silica, pneumoconiosis and lung cancer.
...
PMID:Mortality pattern in men with pneumoconiosis in Poland. 858 29
The 'Sendzimir' Steel Mill, Cracow,
Poland
, gives employment to approximately 17,000 workers. During the years 1994-98, 1396 compensation claims for diseases related to occupational hazards were registered. After a scrupulous investigation, 851 cases were certified as occupation-related diseases. Of this number, 481 cases (56.5%) were diagnosed as pulmonary diseases, including
silicosis
(n = 225, 46.7%); chronic bronchitis (n = 138, 28.7%); lung carcinoma (n = 59, 12.3%); epithelial cancer (n = 42); adenocarcinoma (n = 12); microcellular carcinoma (n = 5); asthma, 12 atopic and 24 non-atopic (n = 36, 7.5%); and asbestosis (n = 23, 4.8%). Chronic bronchitis was diagnosed in patients exposed to industrial dusts, containing SiO2, NOx, and SO2. Asthma occurred most frequently among those exposed mainly to Cr+6, Co and Ni containing dusts, and lung carcinoma in those exposed to policyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, including benz(a)pyren, asbestos, chromium, vapours of oils and lubricants. In 1994-96, chronic bronchitis and
silicosis
, and in 1997-98, lung carcinoma and asthma were most frequently diagnosed in the workers under study. It is likely that the diminishing frequency of chronic bronchitis and
silicosis
was the consequence of technological progress, and greater concern for hygiene standards. Increasing incidence of lung cancer reflects long latency characteristic of this illness.
...
PMID:Occurrence of pulmonary diseases in steel mill workers. 1096 40