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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-two cases (20.13%) of primary
lung cancer
from 159 coal miner autopsies of Beijing coal mining area are reported in this study. The ratio of peripheral type to central type of
lung cancer
is 1.9:1; among them the adenocarcinoma is the most frequent (56.25%). Pathological examination shows that the diffuse interstitial type is the most common
lung cancer
. The occurrence of adenocarcinoma and the degree of lung fibrosis is related. The average number of ferruginous bodies is 190.2 +/- 8.06 in adenocarcinoma, 165.4 +/- 2.60 in squamous carcinoma, the difference is statistically significant (P < 0.05). The amount of trace elements-Fe, Al, Al/Si and Zn/Cu in lung with cancer is less than that without cancer. This article also discusses the relationship between coal mine pneumoconiosis with
lung cancer
of the formation of ferruginous bodies in the lung tissue of coal miner autopsies, which resembles the
lung cancer
combined with
asbestosis
. We also discussed the carcinogenesis of trace element in lung.
...
PMID:[Study on the incidence of coal mine pneumoconiosis and lung cancer in Beijing coal mining district]. 129 8
In the present study, lung samples from 126 autopsied cases were examined to determine the content of mineral fibers using analytical transmission electron microscopy (ATEM). The cases were divided into four groups (22 lungs of persons exposed to ambient environmental pollution, 32 cases of mesothelioma, 38 cases of primary
lung cancer
, and 34
asbestosis
cases, 13 of these with additional pleural plaques). Fibers were counted, measured, and mineralogically identified using a combination of X-ray microanalysis and electron diffraction of the non-oriented fiber. Concentration of fibrous particles (defined as particles above 1 micron in length with roughly parallel long sides and an aspect ratio of 5:1 and greater) was calculated as fibers 10(6)/g dry lung weight. The concentration of chrysotile was found to be similar throughout the groups except for two cases in the
asbestosis
group with comparably high numbers of chrysotile. However, a remarkable difference for amphiboles could be observed between the groups. Asbestos bodies were mostly found in the
asbestosis
group. There was a rather good correlation between numbers of amphibole fibers and asbestos bodies, with an average ratio of 10:1. For comparison purposes between occupationally exposed/non-exposed individuals, a transition was found in the concentration range of 3-10(7) asbestos fibers/g dried lung weight.
...
PMID:Electron microscopy analysis of mineral fibers in human lung tissue. 132 6
The asbestos body counts per 5 gm wet lung tissue in 27 (23 pleural and 4 peritoneal) malignant mesothelioma cases derived from 19 autopsy and 8 surgical cases were, according to our own criteria, low level exposure in 13 cases (48.2%), moderate level exposure in 2 cases (7.4%), and high level exposure in 12 cases (44.4%). In our previous study on 235 consecutive autopsy cases, the low level exposure was considered to be environmental, the moderate level was secondary or blue collar, and the high level was occupational. In the present study, about half of the cases examined (44.4%, high level exposure) are closely related to some occupational asbestos exposure and the other half (48.2%) to environmental exposure. The type and size of asbestos fibers from the 12 cases of high level exposure were analyzed and the characteristics were compared with those of cases of low level exposure without
lung cancer
or mesothelioma. Most fibers analyzed (98%) were longer than 5 microns and thicker than 0.10 micron by our counting rules. In the control group, predominant fibers were tremolite or actinolite. In all the 11 pleural mesothelioma cases, the content of amosite fibers was significantly higher than in the controls. In one case of peritoneal mesothelioma, incipient
asbestosis
was found and the predominant fibers were crocidolite. It is suggested that the presence of amosite and crocidolite is linked to mesothelioma. The mean lengths of amosite and crocidolite, as detected by our resolution capabilities, were 36.0 and 20.9 microns, and the mean diameters were 0.51 and 0.27 micron, respectively. Both amosite and crocidolite fibers had high aspect ratios (94.2 and 115.4).
...
PMID:Asbestos fiber analysis in 27 malignant mesothelioma cases. 141 86
Occupational lung diseases are an important source of preventable morbidity and mortality in the United States. A significant proportion of
lung cancer
, mesothelioma,
asbestosis
and the other pneumoconioses, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, is caused by well-established occupational agents, especially among selected subgroups of the general population. Primary prevention of this set of diseases requires identification and control of workplace hazards. In the United States, data from inspections undertaken by the Occupational Safety and Health Agency, and from periodic surveys conducted by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, show that respiratory toxins are commonly found in the workplace. Workplace-based education, surveillance and exposure reduction and elimination are essential components of a strategy to prevent occupational lung disorders.
...
PMID:Primary prevention of occupational lung disease: a view from the United States. 142 4
There is extensive information on discordance in general between accuracy of medical diagnoses on death certificate categorization of cause of death and available clinical and histopathological data. This is as true for occupational disease as for other conditions. But occupational illnesses bear a special problem. Discordance is not equal across the board--it may vary with each occupationally related disease, and no single formula can be applied. It may be high for angiosarcoma and low for acute hydrogen sulfide poisoning, low for bladder cancer, high for unsuspected methyl mercury poisoning. We have found that for one agent--asbestos--there were different rates of discordance for different asbestos-related diseases (e.g.,
lung cancer
, mesothelioma,
asbestosis
, kidney cancer) among 4,951 deaths studied prospectively from 1967 to 1986. Caution is therefore required before accepting generalizations concerning (unstudied) discordance in occupational mortality studies, and in their use in risk assessment models.
...
PMID:Use of death certificates in epidemiological studies, including occupational hazards: variations in discordance of different asbestos-associated diseases on best evidence ascertainment. 144 83
We compared death certificates for asbestos-associated diseases (mesothelioma,
lung cancer
,
asbestosis
) in two asbestos workers' cohorts. One (insulation workers) had current or recent employment and a strong, continuing union support system which gave them much information about the effects of asbestos exposure. The second cohort, asbestos factory workers, had no such advantage. The factory had closed almost 30 years before, and its workers had dispersed into many areas of the state and nation. Accuracy of medical diagnosis was comparable in the two groups, but occupational listings were not. Three-quarters of the insulators' death certificates told of asbestos work, while virtually none of the factory workers' certificates provided such information, even for deaths of mesothelioma and
asbestosis
. The data indicate that disease categories, based on medical and pathological diagnoses, at least for asbestos-associated disease, tend to be accurate. Attempts to identify groups at risk by sorting occupational categories can give variable results, good for those with current exposures, much less satisfactory for those with long-past occupational exposures.
...
PMID:Death certificates in epidemiological studies, including occupational hazards: inaccuracies in occupational categories. 144 84
Thirty nine phenotypes of human leucocyte antigens (HLA)-A-B-DR and DQ were obtained from 99 asbestos workers (one woman and 98 men). Presence or absence of antinuclear antibodies and rheumatoid factor was determined in 91 of them. Workers were divided into five groups: asbestos workers with no apparent disease (AW; n = 17), diffuse benign pleural disease (PD; n = 31),
asbestosis
(AS; n = 24),
asbestosis
with
lung cancer
(AS-CA; n = 14), and mesothelioma (M; n = 13). Compared with AW, several trends of differences of HLA antigen prevalence were found in patients with asbestos related disease, but these did not achieve statistical significance when p was corrected (pcorr) by number of analyses undertaken. Analysis of the results obtained in previous studies together with the results of this study showed that compared with AW, AS patients had decreased prevalence of HLA-DR5 (pcorr < 0.02). Reasons for the differences in results of previous studies and statistical methods commonly used to compare prevalences of HLA antigen are discussed.
...
PMID:The histocompatibility antigen in asbestos related disease. 147 39
Asbestos-related diseases are dose-related. Among these,
asbestosis
has occurred only with the heavy exposures of the past, is a disappearing disease, and is of no concern with the very small exposures from building occupancy. A possibly increased incidence of
lung cancer
has been included in risk analysis, but probably is also related to high exposure in that both epidemiologic and experimental data suggest a link between the process of alveolar inflammation and fibrogenesis and carcinogenesis. The major concern has been mesothelioma in that it has occurred with much lower household and neighborhood exposure. Additionally, anxiety concerning buildings with ACM has been heightened by finding of friable asbestos in about 20% of public buildings, discovery of environmental asbestos fibers and asbestos bodies in autopsies, and demonstration of a linear relationship between exposure and
lung cancer
risk in occupational groups, inviting extrapolation to a much lower dose. Legislative and regulatory mandates, promotional activities of abatement companies, adverse court decisions placing the onus of repairs on asbestos manufacturers, and a "pandemic of mediagenic disease" all have contributed to panic among building owners, school boards, insurers, and others. In that there is neither clinical nor epidemiologic support for asbestos-related disease from building occupancy, risk estimates have been based on extrapolation from past experience with generally high-dose occupational exposure. However, only a few epidemiologic studies have contained quantitative estimates of exposure, and these have been measured in terms of all particles, with conversion to asbestos fibers uncertain and the fiber type and dimension largely unknown. To these uncertainties must be added the unproved assumption of a linear dose-response down to very low levels of exposure with no threshold. At the other end of the scale extrapolation has required measurements of present building exposure, and these have been revised downward as methods for collection and analysis have improved. Risk estimates in this country and abroad have assumed exposure to 0.001 f/mL, with indicated lifetime risks for cancer ranging from about 2 to 20 per 1 million students. However, these estimates have assumed mixed fiber exposure whereas most building exposure comes from chrysotile, which is much less toxic than the amphiboles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Asbestos exposure in buildings. 151 51
Asbestos is a versatile fibrous mineral that can cause lung disease and death.
Asbestosis
, benign pleural disease,
lung cancer
, and mesothelioma can all result from inhaling asbestos. The history of disease and exposure risks are discussed. The difficult assessment of risk and the long latency period for development of disease demand evaluation and regular surveillance of asbestos-exposed workers.
...
PMID:Asbestos-related lung disease. 160 90
In 1979 all former workers from the Wittenoom asbestos industry who could be traced to an address were sent a questionnaire to determine smoking history. Occupational exposure to crocidolite was known from employment records. Of 2928 questionnaires sent, satisfactory replies were received from 2400 men and 149 women. Eighty per cent of these had smoked at some time and 50% were still smoking. Since that time 40 cases of
lung cancer
and 66 cases of compensatable
asbestosis
have occurred in this cohort. The incidence of both
lung cancer
and
asbestosis
was greatest in those subjects with the highest levels of exposure to crocidolite and in ex-smokers. Statistical modelling of the joint effects of these exposures on the incidence of each disease indicated that crocidolite exposure multiplied the rates of
lung cancer
due to smoking and that smoking has no measurable effect on the rates of
asbestosis
. There was also some evidence that the incidence rate of
lung cancer
is falling with time.
...
PMID:Smoking, exposure to crocidolite, and the incidence of lung cancer and asbestosis. 164 76
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