Asbestos-related diseases

Knowledge of asbestos-related diseases has been accumulating for over one hundred years as the industrial value of asbestos was recognised for the strength of its fibres and their resistance to destruction, resulting in increasing production and use until the multiple health effects have become appa...

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Veröffentlicht in:The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease 2020-06, Vol.24 (6), p.562-567
Hauptverfasser: Musk, A. W., de Klerk, N., Reid, A., Hui, J., Franklin, P., Brims, F.
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container_end_page 567
container_issue 6
container_start_page 562
container_title The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease
container_volume 24
creator Musk, A. W.
de Klerk, N.
Reid, A.
Hui, J.
Franklin, P.
Brims, F.
description Knowledge of asbestos-related diseases has been accumulating for over one hundred years as the industrial value of asbestos was recognised for the strength of its fibres and their resistance to destruction, resulting in increasing production and use until the multiple health effects have become apparent. Deposition in the lung parenchyma results in an inflammatory/progressively fibrotic response, with impaired gas exchange and reduced lung compliance ('asbestosis'), causing progressive dyspnoea and respiratory failure for which only palliation is indicated, although anti-fibrotic agents used for idiopathic usual interstitial pneumonitis remain to be evaluated. Benign pleural effusion, diffuse pleural fibrosis (occasionally with associated rolled atelectasis) and pleural plaques are the non-malignant pleural diseases that result from fibres reaching the pleura. But the main issues that led to the ban on asbestos in industry are those of malignancy: lung cancer, malignant mesothelioma (MM) of the pleura and MM of the peritoneum. Bronchogenic carcinoma risk from asbestos exposure is dose-dependent and multiplies the risk attributable to tobacco smoking. The principles of treatment are as for all cases of lung cancer. Low-dose computed tomography screening of exposed people can detect early-stage, non-small cell cancers, with improved survival. The amphibole varieties of asbestos are much more potent causes of MM than chrysotile, and the risk increases exponentially for 40-50 years following first exposure. As MM is non-resectable and poorly responsive to chemotherapy and radiotherapy, curative treatment is not possible and screening not justified.
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identifier ISSN: 1027-3719
ispartof The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease, 2020-06, Vol.24 (6), p.562-567
issn 1027-3719
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subjects Asbestos
Asbestos - toxicity
Asbestosis - diagnostic imaging
Asbestosis - epidemiology
Atelectasis
Cell survival
Chemotherapy
Chrysotile
Computed tomography
Diseases
Dyspnea
Exposure
Fibers
Fibrosis
Gas exchange
Humans
Inflammation
Lung Cancer
Lung Neoplasms - epidemiology
Lung Neoplasms - etiology
Malignancy
Mesothelioma
Mesothelioma - epidemiology
Mesothelioma - etiology
Mesothelioma - therapy
Palliation
Parenchyma
Peritoneum
Plaques
Pleura
Pleural effusion
Pneumonitis
Radiation therapy
Respiration
Respiratory failure
Risk
Screening
Tobacco
Tobacco smoking
title Asbestos-related diseases
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