asbestos fiber
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2021 ◽  
pp. 91-115
Author(s):  
Steven P. Compton ◽  
Matthew R. Underwood

Author(s):  
Dario Mirabelli ◽  
Alessia Angelini ◽  
Pietro Gino Barbieri ◽  
Roberto Calisti ◽  
Fabio Capacci ◽  
...  

We read with interest the report by Visonà and coworkers on the lung asbestos fiber burden in an autopsy series of decedents from mesothelioma (MM: 59 cases) and individuals who “suffered from asbestosis and died of its complications” (13 cases) [...]


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 5-7
Author(s):  
Arvind Pathak ◽  
Manbir Giri ◽  
Bishnu Pokhrel ◽  
Manoj Nidhi Wagle

The bulk materials include the construction materials such as plaster sand gravel and cement as well as raw materials. Asbestos is the naturally occurring magnesium silicate mineral fibers which has high tensile strength, flexibility and resistance to chemicals, high temperature and stress; this is why it has been considered and used in bulk materials. These mineral fibers are needle shaped and can stick to lung tissue when inhaled and cause inflammation and serious health problems such as asbestosis, mesothelioma and lung cancer or internal fibrosis. It can be detected by simple microscopic method using mineral acid and heat treatment. The method would help in quality analysis of asbestos fiber and save from asbestos induced disease and to develop alternative materials of asbestos fiber material.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 862-871
Author(s):  
Onyeka Okeke ◽  
Harold Chinedu Okeke ◽  
Ernest Ezeh ◽  
Charles Chukwubuikem Aniobi ◽  
Uchechi Rowland Imoh

Author(s):  
Murray M Finkelstein ◽  
Christopher Meisenkothen

Abstract There is an ongoing argument about the potency of chrysotile asbestos to cause malignant mesothelioma. Authors of chrysotile risk assessments have relied upon the results of an epidemiologic study, published in 1984, to state that there were no mesotheliomas found among workers at a Connecticut friction products plant. McDonald reported the first two cases in 1986. In 2010, we reported the work histories and pathologic reports of five individuals from the Connecticut plant who were diagnosed with mesothelioma. Despite this, a review of the health effects of chrysotile published in 2018 continued to state that there were no cases of mesothelioma from this plant. We report here two new cases that were diagnosed after the publication of our previous report, bringing the current total to nine cases. We also discuss the results of previously unpublished air sampling data from the plant. Chrysotile, mainly from Canada, was the only asbestos fiber type used until 1957 when some anthophyllite was added in making paper discs and bands. Beyond this original description of the anthophyllite usage from McDonald, there is a dearth of information about the amount of anthophyllite used in the plant, the frequency of its use, and the specific departments where it was used. For over 30 years in the published literature, this factory has alternatively been described as a ‘chrysotile’ or ‘predominantly chrysotile’ factory. While it is clear that some anthophyllite was used in the factory (in addition to 400 pounds of crocidolite in the laboratory), given the volume, frequency, and processes using chrysotile, it still seems satisfactory to describe this cohort as a predominantly, but not exclusively, chrysotile-exposed cohort.


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