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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-six patients with primary
lung cancer
were studied in whose blood we found a significant increase in the levels of
copper
, ceruloplasmin, lactic-dehydrogenase and alpha 2-globulins. The role of
copper
in pulmonary cancerogenesis is discussed.
...
PMID:Serum copper, ceruloplasmin, lactic-dehydrogenase and alpha 2-globulin in lung cancer. 9 May 32
An increased mortality from
lung cancer
, cardiovascular disease, haematolymphatic malignancy and cirrhosis of the liver has been reported among smelter workers and others exposed to arsenic. This study uses the case-referent (case-control) technique and is concerned with workers in a
copper
smelter in a complex work environment, characterised by the presence of trivalent arsenic in combination with sulphur dioxide and
copper
, and also with other agents.
Lung cancer
mortality was found to be increased about five-fold and cardiovascular disease about two-fold, showing a dose-response relationship to arsenic exposure. Mortality from malignant blood disease (leukaemia and myeloma) and cirrhosis of the liver was also slightly increased. This mortality pattern among the smelter workers is consistent with earlier reports. An increased mortality from cardiovascular disease in this type of industry is of particular interest as it has been reported only once before.
...
PMID:Arsenic exposure and mortality: a case-referent study from a Swedish copper smelter. 62 94
The per-capita intakes of zinc, cadmium,
copper
and of chromium were estimated from food consumption data in 28 countries and were found to correlate directly with the age-corrected mortalities from cancers of intestine, prostate, breast, leukemia, skin and of other organs, suggesting that the anticarcinogenic effect of selenium is counteracted by other trace elements. Similarly calculated dietary intakes of manganese are inversely correlated, particularly with the mortalities from cancer of pancreas, an organ normally known to contain high concentrations of this element. Arsenic intakes correlate inversely with the male
lung cancer
mortalities. A number of other direct and inverse associations were observed which suggest that trace elements in the human diet may hav both benign and adverse effects on tumor development. The zinc concentrations in whole blood collected from healthy donors in the U.S. correlate directly with regional mortalities from cancers of intestine, breast and of other sites. The origin of these associations is discussed primarily in terms of the seleium-antagonistic effect of zinc and of some of the other elements considered. Results of animal experiments and of other studies are cited which support hypotheses that link human cancer development to possible deficiencies or excesses in the dietary trace element intakes.
...
PMID:Cancer mortality correlation studies--IV: associations with dietary intakes and blood levels of certain trace elements, notably Se-antagonists. 85 92
This report examines the mortality experience of 527 men who retired from a
copper
smelter where they were exposed to airborne arsenic trioxide. Urinary arsenic values of all plant employees were determined in 1973, and the relative arsenic exposure in the various departments of the plant were determined. The relationship of airborne arsenic concentrations to urinary arsenic values was studied in a separate experiment, and the feasibility of using urinary arsenic values as a measure of arsenic exposure was established. The mortality experience of the cohort under study showed them to have a mortality 12.2% higher than was found for males of the same area at the same ages and in the same time period. The excess mortality was due chiefly to respiratory cancer. When the deaths were classified by total lifetime arsenic exposure, the respiratory cancer mortality was linearly related to the amount of exposure. The 1973 figures for arsenic exposure underestimated the exposure of the cohort group by a factor of possibly 10. Evidence was obtained which suggests that after removal from arsenic exposure, the risk of
lung cancer
declines. Certain of the data which are presented suggests there may be a threshold value for airborne arsenic trioxide exposure below which no adverse effects may be expected.
...
PMID:Mortality experience in relation to a measured arsenic trioxide exposure. 90 88
A non-concurrent prospective study was made on deaths from cancer and other causes occurring among 2,675 male workers at a metal refinery from 1949 to 1971. The expected number of deaths computed by applying age- and cause-specific death rates of Japanese males to these workers was compared with the observed number of deaths. Among 839
copper
smelters, significantly increased mortalities were noted for
lung cancer
(SMR = 1,189) and colon cancer, but nor for cancer of the stomach, liver (primary) and biliary passages, pancreas and skin or for leukemia, tuberculosis, cerebrovascular diseases, heart diseases and liver cirrhosis. A dose-response relationship was demonstrated between the mortality from
lung cancer
and the degree of exposure. A very high excess mortality from
lung cancer
(SMR = 2,500) was seen among
copper
smelters who were considered to have been most heavily exposed to arsenic or workers who had engaged in sintering and blast furnace operations for 15 years of more before 1949. The latent period of
lung cancer
was 37.6 years on average, and not related to level of exposure. Twenty-six of 29 deaths from
lung cancer
among
copper
smelters occurred after they had left the refinery. Other production workers and clerical workers showed no significant excess mortality from any kind of cancer.
...
PMID:A cohort study on mortality from cancer and other causes among workers at a metal refinery. 125 55
In an attempt to assess whether silica induces
lung cancer
, a nested case-control study of 316 male
lung cancer
cases and 1352 controls was carried out among pottery workers and tungsten,
copper
-iron, and tin miners from five provinces in south central China. Exposure to dust and silica for each study subject was evaluated quantitatively by cumulative exposure measures based on historical industrial hygiene records. Measurements on confounders such as inorganic arsenic, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and radon were also collected from the worksites. Information on cigarette smoking was obtained by interviews of the subjects or their next of kin. A significant trend of increasing risk of
lung cancer
with exposure to silica was found for tin miners, but not for miners working in tungsten or
copper
-iron mines. Concomitant and highly correlated exposures to arsenic and PAHs among tin miners were also found. Risk of
lung cancer
among pottery workers was related to exposure to silica, although the dose-response gradient was not significant. Risks of
lung cancer
were significantly increased among silicotic subjects in iron-
copper
and tin mines, but not in pottery factories or tungsten mines. The results of this study provide only limited support for an aetiological association between silica and
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:A nested case-control study of lung cancer among silica exposed workers in China. 131 81
This article probed into the internal relations and significance between differentiation of syndrome of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and trace elements--
copper
and zinc in
lung cancer
patients. The serum
copper
and zinc of 95 patients with
lung cancer
and 82 healthy persons were measured. According to differentiation of syndrome of TCM types of 95
lung cancer
patients were divided, and the relations with their levels of serum
copper
, zinc and the ratio of
copper
/zinc compared respectively. The authors found that there were some inner links among the differentiation syndromes and levels of serum
copper
, zinc and its ratio. The result showed that the level of Cu/Zn ratio could reflect increase and decrease of body resistance and pathogenic factors the level of Cu/Zn ratio was more significant than that of
copper
and zinc. The authors suggested that the ratio of Cu/Zn could be used as the criteria of differentiation of syndrome of TCM. It is clinically significant to combine the level of
copper
, zinc and its ratio with differentiation of syndrome of TCM to evaluate the severity and prognosis of the patients and to direct the treatment of them with TCM.
...
PMID:[Probe into internal relation between classification of the differentiation-syndrome in traditional Chinese medicine and serum copper and zinc in lung cancer]. 132 41
As part of a larger study relating to silica exposure, silicosis, and
lung cancer
mortality in Chinese mine and factory workers, 1936 old posterior-anterior chest X-rays were re-interpreted according to the 1986 Chinese Roentgenodiagnostic Criteria of pneumoconioses. Each film was independently read by three individuals from a panel of eleven radiologists, and this reading was compared to the original one. Subsequent to the independent readings, a groups of three readers interpreted the films together, called the consensus readings. Comparisons were made by Chinese stage of pneumoconiosis. For the entire cohort, there was a crude agreement of 57.4% between the old and the new interpretations. Agreement within one step of full agreement was 92.5%. The interpretations done by median reading and by consensus were very similar. In general, there was a tendency for the old readings to be slightly higher compared to the new interpretations. This tendency was most marked in the tin mines, followed in decreasing order by the iron/
copper
mines, the potteries, and the tungsten mines. The agreement between the old and new interpretations is felt to be satisfactory.
...
PMID:A comparison of radiographic interpretation of silica exposed workers using the 1963 and the 1986 Chinese roentgenodiagnostic criteria of pneumoconioses. 133 88
A total of 1,388 workers employed for at least 3 months at a
copper
/nickel smelter and nickel refinery were followed up for cancer from 1953 to 1987 through the Finnish Cancer Registry. There were 1,339 male and 49 female workers, making a total of 27,130 and 706 person-years, respectively. All of the women worked in the refinery, which opened in 1960, the same year the smelting of nickel began. A total of 67 cancers were diagnosed among the men, the standardized incidence ratio for all cancers being 1.0. No cancer was found among the women (1.8 expected). The risk of cancer among men was analysed according to primary site, exposure to nickel, type of work, years since first exposure and age at diagnosis. In the subcohort of nickel refinery workers, one case of sinonasal cancer was observed, against 0.02 expected, but otherwise no significantly increased risks of cancer were found. In addition to the small size of the cohort, the non-positive finding concerning
lung cancer
might be related to the relatively low arsenic exposure and, perhaps, to the late commencement of nickel production.
...
PMID:Cancer risk among workers at a copper/nickel smelter and nickel refinery in Finland. 158 30
A retrospective industrial hygiene investigation was undertaken to explain the cause of a statistically significant excess
lung cancer
mortality observed in a subset of a large cohort of nickel workers involved in mining, smelting, and refining of nickel and
copper
in Ontario. The focus of this paper is to demonstrate how an industrial hygiene follow-up assessment of an epidemiologic finding can help to identify a likely cause. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) alone or in association with particulate and gaseous contaminants (e.g., SO2) were likely the causative agents of the excess
lung cancer
observed among the lead welders, cranemen, and arc furnace workers of the
copper
refinery.
...
PMID:Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs): a possible cause of lung cancer mortality among nickel/copper smelter and refinery workers. 160 42
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