Lung content analysis of cases occupationally exposed to chrysotile asbestos
The lung contents of six workers who had been occupationally exposed to chrysotile asbestos were examined. Five were lung cancer cases from Quebec, Canada. The sixth, an American worker who had developed pleural mesothelioma, was particularly interesting, with the lung content strikingly distinct from the Canadian cases; chrysotile, the predominant fiber in his lung, was present at a concentration 300 times that of the average total fiber content in the Canadian cases. The fiber length distribution of the chrysotile recovered from the U.S. mesothelioma case was indistinguishable from that of chrysotile specimens known to produce mesotheliomas in rats. It was also found that the characteristics of the calcium-magnesium-iron silicate fibers present in all six cases were not readily comparable to tremolite asbestos specimens known to induce mesotheliomas in animals.
Publication Number: P/94/26
First Author: Nolan RP
Other Authors: Langer AM , Addison J
Publisher: US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences,111 T.W. Alexander Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC USA 27709,North Carolina
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