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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among a cohort of 544 men with at least 20 years of employment in chrysotile mining and milling at Thetford Mines, Canada, 16% of the deaths were from
lung cancer
and 15% from
asbestosis
. The excess over expected deaths from these causes account for 43 of 178 deaths in the group. The risk of death of
asbestosis
, at equal times fron onset of exposure, is very similar in miners and millers, factory workmen and insulators. The ratio of observed to expected deaths from
lung cancer
is similar in the miners and millers and factory workers, but higher in insulators. The risk of death of mesothelioma in miners and millers is decidedly less than the other two groups. The exact causes of the reduced risk in this category are not yet completely clarified.
...
PMID:Long-term mortality experience of chrysotile miners and millers in Thetford Mines, Quebec. 29 61
In several large groups of workers employed in chemical plants, chest x-ray abnormalities (small irregular opacities and/or pleural changes) of the type known to be induced by asbestos were found in a proportion of those examined. A cross-sectional study of maintenance workers in a large chemical plant was undertaken to evaluate the prevalence of
asbestosis
; 185 workers were examined. Radiologic evidence of parenchymal interstitial fibrosis was found in 24% of those examined; in 10% of workers, parenchymal fibrosis was the only abnormality. Pleural fibrosis and/or calcification was found in the absence of parenchymal fibrosis in 14% of cases; in another 14% of workers, both parenchymal and pleural abnormalities were detected. The prevalence was significantly higher in those employed 20 or more years. Pleural abnormalities were more prevalent than were parenchymal changes. The increased risk of
lung cancer
and mesothelioma remains to be studied.
...
PMID:Asbestos disease in maintenance workers of the chemical industry. 29 63
The occupational group composed of the iron-miners working at the bottom of the mines in Lorraine makes up a high risk population for
lung cancer
(The carcinogenic index is 5 to 12 times as high as that of the population of non-miners). The authors report a new series of 270 cases in support of this assertion. The cancers have few particular characteristics. Their genesis appears to be related with the action of many co-factors: tobacco, various gases and noxious dust, iron particles. Our findings are similar to those of the Swedish, British and Russian authors. The occupation of iron-miner at the bottom of the mine appears then to favorize the manifestation of
lung cancer
. So it would be fair to consider this tumor an occupational disease, as with
asbestosis
.
...
PMID:[Should the lung cancer of iron-miners in Lorraine be considered an occupational disease? (author's transl)]. 49 83
The mortality from 1946 to 1975 of over 900 North Italian chrysotile asbestos workers first employed between 1930 and 1965 has been studied. Nine deaths were certified as attributable to
asbestosis
, and eleven to
lung cancer
. One death was attributed to mesothelioma of pleura but this diagnosis was not supported by histological examination. Comparison with the national figures for all Italy did not reveal an excess of deaths from
lung cancer
but during the last quinquennium of observation, the SMR for
lung cancer
rose to 206. Simulation experiments enabled a dust index in fibre/years to be attached to each man in the cohort. All but two of the deaths from
lung cancer
occurred in the higher exposure group. The relative risk of
lung cancer
in this group was 2.89. The eleven workers who died from
lung cancer
were all cigarette smokers. A further period of observation is required to monitor the mortality of the surviving workers.
...
PMID:Mortality of chrysotile asbestos workers at the Balangero Mine, Northern Italy. 50 Jul 77
1. Pleural fluid contained protein-bound hyaluronic acid, protein-bound chondroitin sulfate, hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate, undersulfated chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate. The composition of acid glycosaminoglycans in pleural fluid seems to reflect the rate of biosynthesis and degradation of these polysaccharides at some sites which are closely related to the pleural cavity. 2. A possibility was suggested that hyaluronic acid was synthesized in pleural tissue and was excreted shortly thereafter into the surroundings, as evidenced by experiments with rabbit pleural tissue. 3. In human, hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate and heparan sulfate were found in thickened pleurae caused by
lung cancer
, in those caused by
asbestosis
and also in tumor tissues of pleural mesothelioma. The molecular size of hyaluronic acid from pleural mesothelioma was found to be larger than that from human unbilical cord. 4. Quantification and histochemical study of acid glycosaminoglycans demonstrated that the quantity of hyaluronic acid in tissue specimens of mesothelioma by far exceeded that in non-mesothelioma cases (statistically significant). 5. Thus a possibility was suggested that histochemical investigation together with microquantitation of hyaluronic acid in pleural tissue may prove to be an efficient means of differential diagnosis of pleural mesothelioma. 6. Definite conclusion on the relationship between the fluctuation with time in quantity of acid glycosaminoglycans of the effusions and etiology of pleurisy awaits further investigations.
...
PMID:A study on acid glycosaminoglycans in pleural diseases. 54 21
Quantitative impairment of lymphocyte responses to phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) has been demonstrated in six (21%) out of twenty-eight patients with asbestos-associated pulmonary fibrosis, in comparison with a group of unexposed normal controls. The impairment tended to occur in patients with fairly severe fibrosis, comparatively short duration of exposure to asbestos dust and with increases in serum immunoglobulin levels. One patient with
asbestosis
and an associated bronchial carcinoma also had depressed lymphocyte responses to PHA. These findings suggest a relationship between defective T-lymphocyte function and the fibrotic response in
asbestosis
. Whether it is also linked with the development of
lung cancer
, occurring either before or at a pre-clinical stage of tumour growth, and is of value in identifying patients especially at risk should now be explored in longitudinal studies. However, eight out of ten patients with asbestos-associated pleural mesothelioma and without lung fibrosis showed no evidence of impaired cellular immunity, either by in vitro testing with PHA or by vivo delayed hypersensitivity skin testing, indicating that impaired T-lymphocyte function is unlikely to be a common finding in all types of asbestos-associated malignancy.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte responses to phytohaemagglutinin in patients with asbestosis and pleural mesothelioma. 64 28
This paper describes the characteristic clinical features, mortality and survival rate of 202 patients diagnosed as having
asbestosis
by the Institute of Occupational Health between 1934 and 1976. One hundred and thirty-three patients were subjected to a clinical reexamination. Major findings included breathlessness in 118 (88.7%), persistent sputum in 95 (71.4%), crepitations in 77 (58.0%) and finger clubbing in 43 (32.3%). Of the 95 patients with persistent sputum, 19 (20.0%) were nonsmokers. Of the 174 men registered as having
asbestosis
, 56 had died, whereas the expected number of deaths among men of the same age in the Finnish general population was only 23.4. The respective figures for
lung cancer
were 19 observed and 2.1 expected. No excess mortality was found for other malignomas. Among men with
asbestosis
, the life expectancy was shorter for smokers than for non- and exsmokers.
...
PMID:Clinical features, mortality and survival of patients with asbestosis. 73 87
One hundred and fourteen patients with
asbestosis
, 59% of whom were chronic cigarette smokers, were subjected to a cytological sputum examination which showed: 36 workers (31.6%) with squamous metaplasia, 20 (17.5%) with benigh columnar cell atypia, 5 (4.4%) with benign dysplasia, 2 with suspicious cells for carcinoma, and 1 with anaplastic (microcellular) carcinoma. Clinically and histologically five lung cancers were verified, two of which were cytologically false negatives. All
asbestosis
patients with
lung cancer
were chronic smokers. Of the 114
asbestosis
patients, 49 (43.0%) had ferruginous bodies in their sputum. The workers from an asbestos quarry more frequently had ferruginous bodies in their specimens than the other patients. Radiographically moderate and severe
asbestosis
cases showed squamous metaplasia more frequently than those with radiographically slight
asbestosis
. Most of the detected cellular atypias represented reversible alterations of the respiratory epithelium. It is, however, important to screen the sputum of older (greater than 40 years of age) smoking asbestos workers with benign and suspicious cellular atypias regularly because these alterations may represent the first step int he pathway to bronchogenic cancer. The results of this study did not answer the question of whether bronchial cancer of patients with
asbestosis
is curable if detected early with cytological methods.
...
PMID:Sputum cytology of asbestosis patients. 73 89
A 30-year historical cohort mortality study was made of 264 men hired during 1935-45 who worked in a chrysotile asbestos products factory for one year or more and were alive January 1, 1945. Follow-up was 94% complete. The overall standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was only 0.61 while the SMR for all cancers was 0.75, for
lung cancer
0.93, and for gastrointestinal cancer 1.05. Two men died of
asbestosis
. The overall SMR was higher for men who worked five years or more than for men who worked one to four years but the 30-year mortality rates were the same after age adjustment. For asbestos-related diseases the differences in work duration had no effect on mortality. The data show a favorable mortality experience for men exposed to chrysotile alone.
...
PMID:Mortality of a cohort exposed to chrysotile asbestos. 91 68
The Transport and General Workers' Union (UK) has an active programme devoted to monitoring the health of its 1.8 million members. Files on members who died of bladder cancer after exposure to beta-naphthylamine go back to the late 1920's. From the same period came data on members suffering from
asbestosis
which included same cases of
lung cancer
before the industrial cause of the disease was recognized. These and other more recent examples including Nonox S and vinyl chloride amply justify the need for setting up registers of all workers who are at risk from industrial exposure. The scientfic community has a responsibility for communicating data regarding hazards both to employers and employees who can then ensure that all who have been exposed can be notified and screened. The trade unions have a part to play in ensuring that industry accepts conditions of greater control under the new regulations in the United Kingdom. There must be a continuing tripartite discussion between industrial management, trade unions and the responsible governement official.
...
PMID:The trade unionist's view of occurpational cancer. 100 86
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