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Query: UMLS:C0037116 (
silicosis
)
1,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Abnormal numbers of birefringent particles have been found in the lungs of seven patients (five vineyard workers, one farmer, and one rural resident) in association with a spectrum of early to late interstitial inflammation and fibrosis.
Nodular
granulomas of the type seen in
silicosis
were absent. Scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive x-ray analysis of 177 individual particles (less than 5 micrometer.) in situ in the lungs of four of the patients showed mostly silicates (notably aluminum, silicon, and potassium), with 5 to 10 per cent silicon dioxide. An analysis of particles less than 5 micrometer. from both vineyard and non-vineyard soil showed lung and soil particles to have a similar composition. The presence of large amounts of silicates in the lung tissues, in association with chronic inflammation and fibrosis, implicates the silicates in the causation of the fibrosis. The silicate deposits may, in large part, be a marker, reflecting a mixture of toxic soil additives or pesticides found in commercial clay silicate products or in dusts from the soil itself. The findings do not exclude lung pathology of a similar nature in regions outside of the farm.
...
PMID:Silicate pneumoconiosis of farm workers. 43 58
Silicosis
is an important disease not only for its prevalence and the degree of pulmonary insufficiency it entails but also because it provides a natural model of interstitial fibrotic disease in the lung which is of known origin. This can, in turn, help us understand the pathogenic nature of a great number of pulmonary fibroses whose cause is unknown. The fifty postmortem studies which we describe correspond to miners who had worked in underground mines in the mountainous region near Cartagena (SE Spain) for times ranging from 5 to 36 years. The autopsies showed that they had been exposed to dust containing abundant metallic particles, particularly iron oxide (mixed dust). Although the pathogenic action was related with silica, it was also clearly modified by the composition of the dust associated with it. The basic lesions which are produced in the lung after inhalation of silica (< 5 microns diameter) are coniosis, fibroconiosis and sclerohyalinosis. The sclerohyalino nodules are characterized by abundant collagenization and hyalinization, different types of which can be distinguished according to the disposition of the collagenous fibres.
Nodular
lesions gradually grow in size even when exposure to dust has ceased. As they grow they get nearer until they join to form conglomerate masses. When the diameter exceeds 3 cm this is called massive fibrosis. Pulmonary tuberculosis was found in 27% of cases. This took the form of lesions, which could be associated to or independent of silicotic lesions. Besides evolutive nodular lesions, a patient suffering from
silicosis
may show other unspecific lesions which must be correctly evaluated for a more correct clinical-pathological assessment, since, clinically, the respiratory function may be profoundly affected although such silicotic damage may be not very noticeable by radiological examination.
Silicosis
of the liver and spleen was not infrequent in the autopsies carried out, with basic lesions in all evolutive states being observed, the most evolved in the spleen. This means that
silicosis
should be considered as a systemic illness.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary fibrosis caused by inhalation: silicosis]. 1042 Sep 32