Asbestos

Project ID

42

Category

IRIS

Added on

Aug. 11, 2009, 11:01 a.m.

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Journal Article

Abstract  OBJECTIVE: To determine prevalence estimates for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in noninstitutionalized older adults in the US. Prevalence estimates were compared using 3 different classification methods based on current classification criteria for RA. METHODS: Data from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES-III) were used to generate prevalence estimates by 3 classification methods in persons 60 years of age and older (n = 5,302). Method 1 applied the "n of k" rule, such that subjects who met 3 of 6 of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 1987 criteria were classified as having RA (data from hand radiographs were not available). In method 2, the ACR classification tree algorithm was applied. For method 3, medication data were used to augment case identification via method 2. Population prevalence estimates and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were determined using the 3 methods on data stratified by sex, race/ethnicity, age, and education. RESULTS: Overall prevalence estimates using the 3 classification methods were 2.03% (95% CI 1.30-2.76), 2.15% (95% CI 1.43-2.87), and 2.34% (95% CI 1.66-3.02), respectively. The prevalence of RA was generally greater in the following groups: women, Mexican Americans, respondents with less education, and respondents who were 70 years of age and older. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of RA in persons 60 years of age and older is approximately 2%, representing the proportion of the US elderly population who will most likely require medical intervention because of disease activity. Different classification methods yielded similar prevalence estimates, although detection of RA was enhanced by incorporation of data on use of prescription medications, an important consideration in large population surveys.

Journal Article

Abstract  Asbestos fibers in occupationally exposed individuals relocate from the lung to extrapulmonary sites. A mechanism for relocation is via the lymphatic circulation. Indeed, asbestos fibers have been found in lymph nodes as well as pleural plaques. Our laboratory has recently shown that asbestos fibers also reach the mesentery and omentum in the peritoneal area where a small percentage of mesotheliomas occurs in exposed individuals. The present study uses light and analytical transmission electron microscopy for defining the asbestos burden in digested lung, omentum, and mesentery tissues from individuals considered as representing the general population in East Texas. The findings, when compared with previous data from occupationally exposed individuals, indicate extreme contrasts as to the level and types of fiber burden between individuals representing the groups.

Journal Article

Abstract  Mesothelioma, a malignancy associated with asbestos, has been recently linked to simian virus 40 (SV40). We found that infection of human mesothelial cells by SV40 is very different from the semipermissive infection thought to be characteristic of human cells. Mesothelial cells are uniformly infected but not lysed by SV40, a mechanism related to p53, and undergo cell transformation at an extremely high rate. Exposure of mesothelial cells to asbestos complemented SV40 mutants in transformation. Our data provide a mechanistic explanation for the ability of SV40 to transform mesothelial cells preferentially and indicate that asbestos and SV40 may be cocarcinogens.

Journal Article

Abstract  BACKGROUND: The thoracic lymph nodes are a part of the clearance system from lung tissue. Accumulation of dust in these nodes are known to occur following some types of exposure. However, no information exists as to asbestos content in lymph nodes from the general population. METHODS: The study cohort consisted of 21 individuals previously defined as nonoccupationally exposed to asbestos. Tissue burden of asbestos obtained from lung analysis by analytical electron microscopy was compared with burden in the lymph nodes. RESULTS: No asbestos fibers were detected in nodes from 8 cases. The majority of the fibers found in lymph nodes were short (<5 microm) and most often noncommercial amphiboles. Ferruginous bodies (FBs) were detected in lymph node from only two samples. CONCLUSIONS: The total asbestos burden in the lung tissue from these individuals was quite low. However, in 12 of the 13 cases that had positive nodes, the tissue burden in the node was appreciably heavier per gram than in the lung. This raises the question as to whether the lymph nodes, though less efficient clearance, may be better indicators of lifetime exposure to dust than lung tissue.

Journal Article

Abstract  Background: The health effects of asbestos are intimately related to the fate of inhaled fibers in the lungs. The kinetics of asbestos fibers have been studied primarily in rodents. The objective of this study was to explore the application of these kinetic models to human autopsy data. Methods: We analyzed the asbestos fiber content of the lungs of 72 Quebec chrysotile miners and millers and 49 control subjects using analytical transmission electron microscopy. Statistical methods included standard multivariate linear regression and locally weighted regression methods. Results: The lung burdens of asbestos bodies and chrysotile and tremolite fibers were correlated, as were the concentrations of short, medium, and long fibers of each asbestos variety. There were significant associations between the duration of occupational exposure and the burdens of chrysotile and tremolite. The concentration of chrysotile decreased with the time since last exposure but the concentration of tremolite did not. The clearance rate varied inversely with the length of chrysotile fibers. For fibers greater than 10μ in length the clearance half-time was estimated to be 8 years. Conclusions: The patterns in our data are compatible with both of the hypotheses suggested from rodent experiments; the existence of a long-term sequestration compartment and overload of clearance mechanisms in this compartment.

Journal Article

Abstract  The primary aim of this prospective study was to examine the tissues and placentas of autopsied stillborn infants for presence of asbestos fibers. Asbestos burden of lung, liver, skeletal muscle, and placenta digests of 82 stillborn infants was determined using standard bleach digestion technique. The digests were examined by electron microscopy, and the types of fibers determined using energy dispersive x-ray analysis and selected area diffraction analysis. Digests of 45 placentas collected from deliveries of liveborn healthy infants were processed and examined similarly as controls. Asbestos fibers were detected in 50% of the fetal digests and 23% of the placental digests of stillborn infants. Of the fibers present, 88% were chrysotile, 10% were tremolite, and 2% were actinolite and anthophyllite. Fibers measured 0.5-16.73 microgram in length (mean 1.55 microgram), and 0.03-0.8 microgram in width (mean 0.098 microgram). Lungs were most frequently positive for fibers (50%), followed by muscle (37%), placenta (23%), and liver (23%). Mean fiber counts were highest in the liver (58,736 f/g), followed by placenta (52,894 f/g), lungs (39,341 f/g), and skeletal muscle (31,733 f/g). Digests of 15% of the control placentas also showed asbestos fibers, although in very small numbers. The mean fiber count of the stillborn placentas (52,894 f/g) was significantly higher than the mean fiber count of the control placentas (mean 19 f/g) (p = 0.001). A highly significant association was found between fiber presence in stillborns and a maternal history of previous abortions (p = 0.007). A significant association was also found between fiber presence and placental diseases (p = 0.041). An association was suggested between working mothers and fiber presence (p = 0.19), although it did not reach statistical significance. The study documents the presence of small and thin asbestos fibers in stillborn fetal tissues and placenta. Significantly higher number of fibers were found in stillborn tissues compared to controls (liveborn placenta). The absence of a maternal history of asbestos-related occupations suggests that the fibers may have been acquired through environmental exposure.

Journal Article

Abstract  Occupational exposure to asbestos has been on decline in the US over the last 2-3 decades. There is, however, concern that environmental asbestos exposure is increasing through the use of asbestos-containing products (Churg 1988; Edelman 1988; Jarvholm et al. 1988; Sebastein et al. 1989). Most of the previous studies on asbestos exposure have included adult subjects only. However, recent studies have demonstrated asbestos fibers in the tissues and/or placenta digests of a series of autopsied stillborn infants (Haque et al. 1992; 1995; 1996). One of these studies found a highly significant difference (p = 0.001) between the mean asbestos counts of tissues from 92 autopsied stillborn infants (52,894 fibers/g) and 45 control placentas of healthy liveborn infants (19 fibers/g) (Haque et al. 1996). A possible relationship between stillbirths and asbestos fiber presence was also suggested by this study. Additionally, significant association was found between a maternal history of previous abortions and asbestos fiber presence in the stillborn tissues (p = 0.007) (Haque et al. 1996).

Journal Article

Abstract  An autopsy study was conducted to investigate whether there is transplacental transfer of asbestos in humans. The asbestos burden of lung, liver, skeletal muscle, and placenta digests of 40 stillborn infants was determined using a bleach digestion method. The fibers detected in the tissue digests were characterized as to the type of asbestos, using electron microscopy, energy-dispersive x-ray analysis, and selected-area diffraction analysis. Placental digests of 45 full-term, liveborn infants were similarly processed as controls. Low levels of small, thin, uncoated asbestos fibers were detected in the placentas and organs of 37.5% of the stillborn infants (15 of 40). The fiber sizes ranged from 0.05 to 5.0 microns in length and 0.03 to 0.3 micron in width, with a mean length of 1.15 microns and a mean width of 0.069 micron. Maximum numbers of fibers were found in the lungs (mean 235,400 fibers/g; n = 10), followed by liver (mean 212,833 fibers/g; n = 6), placenta (mean 164,500 fibers/g; n = 4), and skeletal muscle (80,000 fibers/g; n = 1). The fibers were detected at all stages of gestation and showed no association with gestational age. A significant association was found between fiber presence and working mothers, and positive but nonsignificant associations were found with maternal history of drug abuse, previous abortions, and fetal maceration. No association was found between premature rupture of membranes and fiber presence. No fibers were detected in the 45 placentas of the liveborn control infants. There was a highly significant difference in the asbestos fiber counts of the placentas of the stillborn and liveborn infants (P < .001). Our studies demonstrate the presence of short and thin asbestos fibers in stillborn infants and their positive association with working mothers.

Journal Article

Abstract  The ability of amosite cored asbestos bodies isolated from human lungs to catalyse damage to phi X174 RFI DNA in vitro was measured and compared with that of uncoated amosite fibres with a similar distribution of length. Asbestos bodies (5000 bodies) suspended for 30 minutes in 50 mM NaCl containing 0.5 micrograms phi X174 RFI DNA, pH 7.5, did not catalyse detectable amounts of DNA single strand breaks. Addition of the reducing agent ascorbate (1 mM), however, resulted in single strand breaks in 10% of the DNA. Asbestos bodies in the presence of a low molecular weight chelator (1 mM) and ascorbate catalysed the formation of single strand breaks in 21% of the DNA with citrate or 77% with ethylenediamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA), suggesting that mobilisation of iron may increase damage to DNA. Preincubation for 24 hours with desferrioxamine B, which binds iron (Fe (III)) and renders it redox inactive, completely inhibited the reactivity of asbestos bodies with DNA, strongly suggesting that iron was responsible. Amosite fibres (5000 fibres/reaction), with a similar length distribution to that of the asbestos bodies, did not catalyse detectable amounts of single strand breaks in DNA under identical reaction conditions. The results of the present study strongly suggest that iron deposits on the amosite core asbestos bodies were responsible for the formation of DNA single strand breaks in vitro. Mobilisation of iron by chelators seemed to enhance the reactivity of asbestos bodies with DNA. It has been postulated that the in vivo deposition of the coat material on to fibres may be an attempt by the lung defenses to isolate the fibre from the lung surface and thus offer a protective mechanism from physical irritation. These results suggest, however, that the iron that is deposited on asbestos fibres in vivo may be reactive, potentially increasing the damage to biomolecules, such as DNA, above that of the uncoated fibres.

Journal Article

Abstract  It is generally accepted that to cause pulmonary disease, mineral fibers must be relatively long and thin but also able to remain in the lung for long periods. This "biopersistence" of fibers is limited by two main mechanisms of fiber clearance: removal by macrophages after phagocytosis and, for some fibers, by actual dissolution. The relative importance of these mechanisms has not been properly evaluated for any type of fiber and will certainly vary with mineral type. The efficiency of macrophage clearance is greatest with short fibers (< 5 microns long) and is reduced as fibers get longer. Fibers > 50 microns long cannot be cleared by macrophages and for some mineral types they may remain in the lung permanently. Others may fracture into shorter lengths, perhaps aided by chemical dissolution, and thus become susceptible to macrophage clearance. However, for a number of areas relating to fiber removal from the lung parenchyma detailed information is still needed: Do dusts differ in their ability to attract macrophages and stimulate these cells to phagocytosis? Following dust uptake what controls the movement of macrophages? Some may penetrate to the interstitium, some phagocytosing fibers in interstitial sites may migrate back to the alveolar space. Some move to the mucociliary escalator and some to the lymphatics. Some, most importantly, move to the pleura. Fibers are found and phagocytosed in the interstitium during the early stages of disease development, but with time many fibers appear isolated in areas of fibrous tissue. Are such fibers subsequently ignored or can they reenter the disease process after years of isolation? Finally, can phagocytosis by macrophages effect dissolution of fibers?(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal Article

Abstract  The importance of nonoccupational asbestos exposure has been emphasized recently. To illustrate this problem, we report 4 persons with asbestos-related disease from household exposure. There were 2 wives of asbestos workers, who cleaned their husbands' work clothes. One developed a mesothelioma and the other plaques, calcification, benign asbestos pleural effusion and subpleural parenchymal fibrosis. 2 men were exposed as children while playing in a cellar room which was also used for their father's muffler repair business. At ages 27 and 33, they had pleural and diaphragmatic calcifications.

Journal Article

Abstract  Thirteen epidemiologic studies of ingested asbestos conducted in five areas of the United States and Canada were reviewed and evaluated for the definitiveness and applicability regarding the development of ambient water quality standards. One or more studies found male or female associations between asbestos in water supplies and cancer mortality (or incidence) due to neoplasms of the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, colon, rectum, gallbladder, pancreas, peritoneum, lungs, pleura, prostate, kidneys, brain, and thyroid, and also due to leukemia. Several methodologic weaknesses and limitations were found in each study, leading to the determination that no individual study or aggregation of studies exist that would establish risk levels from ingested asbestos. A binomial probability analysis of the eight independent studies suggested that, while the level of male-female agreement was generally low, the number of observed positive associations in males and females for neoplasms of the esophagus, stomach, pancreas, and prostate was unlikely to have been generated by chance factors alone, and thus, may have a biological basis related to ingested asbestos. Cancers of the small intestine and leukemia were implicated to a lesser degree in this analysis. The patterns of integrated findings for most gastrointestinal cancers were somewhat consistent with patterns observed among asbestos-exposed occupational groups, whereas the patterns found for pancreatic cancer, kidney cancer, and leukemia were not consistent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal Article

Abstract  There has been great public concern about the adverse health effects resulting from the presence of asbestos fibers in municipal drinking water supplies. This article reviews and summarizes the experimental findings of 11 published papers that have evaluated the carcinogenic potential of asbestos following its ingestion. The long-term, high-level ingestion of various types of asbestos fibers in more than one animal species failed to produce any definite, reproducible, organ-specific carcinogenic effect.

Journal Article

Abstract  Oncogenesis and in vitro data (reported elsewhere in detail) are compared on the basis of relative activity by mass and by dimensional fiber parameters. When tumor induction is compared to the number of fibers of various lengths and aspect ratios in the dose in rats to the degree of tumor induction, a degree of difference with the long thin fiber concept of tumorigenesis by mineral fibers is noted. Consistency is re-established, however, when cognizance is taken of the change in the length and aspect ratio that took place during residence in the lung. This change resulted in a severalfold excess for ferroactinolite of all fiber lengths with high aspect ratios, produced as a result of longitudinal splitting of the introduced fibers. The response by mass in the in vitro procedures did not mimic oncogenesis. When mass was so adjusted that there were an equal number of mineral fibers, aspect ratio greater than 3, for dose for the two minerals, agreement was closer in both the rabbit alveolar macrophage toxicity test and the clonal cytotoxicity assay in Chinese hamster ovary cells. When activity was related to the number of mineral fibers, the same aspect ratio computed to have been contained in the mass dose, agreement with the relative induction of lung tumors was closer. In all cases, erythrocyte lysis was more active in reflecting the number of mineral fibers.

Journal Article

Abstract  Analysis of numbers and types of asbestos fibers present in lung tissue may provide insights into the pathogenesis of asbestos-induced disease, as well as diagnostic information concerning the relationship of a given lesion to asbestos exposure. This type of analysis requires extraction of fibers and asbestos bodies from lung tissue, preferably by means of a digestion-and-concentration technique, and examination with a combination of electron optical techniques, including electron diffraction and energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy. The combination permits definitive identification of asbestos fibers. Asbestos bodies have been shown to contain asbestos no matter what population they are found in, but they appear to be of value in ascertaining unusual exposure only when present in very large numbers. Numbers of asbestos bodies markedly underestimate total numbers of fibers present in lung. In patients from the general population, the mean number of asbestos fibers is about 1 X 10(6)/g dry lung; of this number, more than 80 per cent are fibers of chrysotile less than 5 microns long. Patients in the general population who have pleural plaques have about the same total number of fibers, but their lungs contain about a 50-fold increase in long thin amphibole fibers of commercial origin. Patients who have asbestosis and most patients who have mesothelioma have 100 to 200 X 10(6) fibers/g dry lung; the grade of asbestosis appears to be related to total fiber content. Occasional patients may develop mesotheliomas with much smaller fiber burdens. Both benign and malignant pleural diseases appear to be closely related to the presence of long thin amphibole fibers. Analysis of pulmonary fiber burden suggest that asbestos-related disease is not merely a matter of total numbers of fibers present, but that factors such as fiber type and size are equally important.

Journal Article

Abstract  Tremolite is an amphibole which has been implicated in a variety of disease patterns in different parts of the world. It occurs in a number of phases, which are chemically identical but have specific physical characteristics. In an attempt to clarify the epidemiological findings, tremolite fibres of 3 specific forms--A, B and C--were characterized and studied for biological activity by: (i) in vivo intrapleural injection of rats (2 separate experiments--1 with poor survival). (ii) in vitro enzyme release from mouse peritoneal macrophages (iii) in vitro giant-cell formation in A549 cultures (iv) in vitro cytotoxicity for V79-4 cells. Sample C, which contained more long thin fibres than A and B, was alone in producing mesotheliomas. C, but not A or B, induced LDH and B-glucuronidase enzyme release, and induced giant cells. A was not cytotoxic, B moderately cytotoxic and C as highly cytotoxic as UICC crocidolite. The in vivo studies were marred by being split between 2 experiments, of which the second had poor survival. We are aware of the weakness of our in vivo data, but as Tremolite C was being considered for commercial use on the European market we felt it timely to submit our findings for publication.

Journal Article

Abstract  Radiologic signs of pulmonary asbestos disease were found in 11.3 per cent of 274 wives of shipyard workers who were 20 or more years from initial hiring-on in shipyards in Los Angeles County. Asbestosis was also found in 7.6 per cent of 79 sons and 2.1 per cent of 140 daughters of these workers. The wives, sons, and daughters were without occupational exposure. Comparable radiographic signs were not found in comparison groups. It is probable that asbestos exposure in the household places these family members at risk for mesothelioma and lung cancer.

Journal Article

Abstract  Lungs from 46 autopsied children (age range, 1 to 27 months) were examined for asbestos bodies using a bleach-digestion extraction technique. Ten (21.7%) of 46 children had asbestos bodies in their lungs. Of these ten children, seven were diagnosed with sudden infant death syndrome, and three were diagnosed with bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Thus, 46.6% of children with sudden infant death syndrome and 42.8% of children with bronchopulmonary dysplasia had asbestos bodies. Impaired lung-clearing mechanisms due to either abnormal lung physiology or reorganization of pulmonary architecture may be significant in the formation of asbestos bodies. Additionally, children with asbestos bodies may have been exposed to higher ambient levels of asbestos and other pollutants.

Book/Book Chapter

Abstract  Fibre type, fibre size, deposition, dissolution and migration are all factors of importance in mineral fibre carcinogenesis. These factors are, however, so interrelated that only fibre size can be considered on its own to any extent. When dusts are injected into the pleural or peritoneal cavities, the most carcinogenic samples, producing the most mesotheliomas, are those containing the most long, thin fibres. When very short fibre samples of both amosite and chrysotile recently became available for comparison with long fibre preparations of the same materials, short fibres were found to be much less fibrogenic and carcinogenic than long fibres. The same studies provided important information on fibre deposition and dissolution. Short fibre samples of both asbestos varieties penetrated to the pulmonary parenchyma more easily than long ones but, after deposition, short fibres were cleared more quickly. Very much less chrysotile was present in lung tissue at the end of one year's dusting and clearance during the following 6 months was very much faster. The long fibre chrysotile, which would be expected to be resistant to mechanical clearance, was removed from the lungs much more quickly than short fibre amosite, which was easily phagocytosed by macrophages. This indicates that rapid chrysotile removal from lung tissue is due at least in part to fibre dissolution. The phenomenon of chrysotile dissolution probably explains why this asbestos type has been shown to be extremely carcinogenic in rats but seems less carcinogenic than the amphiboles in humans. Fibres may remain in lung tissue for the 1-2 years necessary to cause tumours in rats but this is too short a time for the much longer lived humans. Only very few fibres penetrate the walls of the gut following massive asbestos ingestion, although a few of these can subsequently be found disseminated to other organs. Fibres are disseminated to other organs much more effectively after inhalation. One area where fibre dissemination has been suggested as being very important is that of transport from the lung tissue to the pleural cavity, but in rats, direct fibre penetration to the pleura occurs very rarely and the exact mechanism by which inhaled fibres reach the sites where they can produce mesotheliomas remains one of the most important subjects for future research.

Journal Article

Abstract  Autopsy samples from eight former shipyard workers were collected from lung parenchyma, tracheal lymph nodes, and pleural plaques. The tissue from each respective area was prepared by a modified bleach digestion technique, and the residue was collected on a 0.2-micron pore polycarbonate or 0.22-micron mixed cellulose ester filter. Quantitation of ferruginous bodies and uncoated fibers was done by light and transmission electron microscopy, respectively. Differences in the asbestos burden were noted for each site. Ferruginous bodies were observed in both parenchyma and nodes but not in plaques. Three subjects were found to have more ferruginous bodies per gram dry weight in their lymph nodes than in their lung parenchyma. Likewise, all subjects were found to have more uncoated fibers per gram in the nodes than in the parenchyma. Amphibole and chrysotile fibers were noted in the lung and extrapulmonary sites, with chrysotile being the predominant asbestiform in plaques. The majority of the uncoated fibers in both the nodes and the plaques were less than or equal to 5 microns in length. However, some fibers with dimensions conforming to the "Stanton hypothesis" reached both areas. These residual patterns most likely reflect the impact of clearance on lung burden as opposed to the eventual accumulation and stasis in the extrapulmonary areas.

Journal Article

Abstract  A 38-year-old woman with pleural mesothelioma who had a history of neighborhood asbestos exposure during her childhood was demonstrated. She had no known history of occupational asbestos exposure. This is the first case of mesothelioma with neighborhood asbestos exposure reported in Japan. Previously-reported cases of mesothelioma with neighborhood asbestos exposure in the English language literature were reviewed.

Journal Article

Abstract  BIOSIS COPYRIGHT: BIOL ABS. RRM HUMAN ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICITY CARCINOGEN AIR POLLUTION EFFECTS

Journal Article

Abstract  Although chrysotile asbestos is a proven human carcinogen, several studies have concluded that these fibers are not mutagenic to cultured mammalian cells. We show here, on the other hand, that when tested using the AL cell system that detects both intragenic and multilocus mutations, chrysotile is indeed mutagenic and comparable in strength to that of gamma-rays. Southern analysis of the induced mutants shows that the majority contains large deletions ranging in size from a few thousand to several million base pairs. Results of our study demonstrate that, while chrysotile may be less durable in vivo than the amphibole fibers such as crocidolites and amosites, it can effectively create genetic damage involved in the cancer process.

Journal Article

Abstract  In South Africa and in the rest of the world, the two mica minerals that have the most important commercial value are muscovite and vermiculite. Muscovite has been making a comparatively small but steady contribution to South Africa's mineral exports since about 1960. Vermiculite mining and concentration were started by the late Or Hans Merensky at Phalaborwa during 1946. Vermiculite has enjoyed good overseas sales since then, and during the past four years has become an important earner of foreign currency for South Africa. The various aspects of the micas that could be of general interest are briefly reviewed, such as the history of their exploitation, their mineralogy and chemistry, and their mining, concentration, production, sales, and future.

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