By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

Asbestos lung fibre concentrations in South African chrysotile mine workers

Bookmarks
Article

Rees, David ; Phillips, James I. ; Garton, Estelle ; Pooley, Fred D.

Annals of Occupational Hygiene

2001

45

6

473-477

asbestos ; chrysotile ; lung deposition ; tremolite

South Africa

Asbestos

http://annhyg.oxfordjournals.org/

English

Bibliogr.

"Mesothelioma has not been found in South African chrysotile miners and millers despite decades of producing about 100 000 tons of the mineral per year. One possible explanation for the scarcity or absence of the cancer may be a relative lack of contaminating fibrous tremolite, an amphibole that variably occurs with chrysotile ores. The fibre content in the lungs of nine former chrysotile mine workers was ascertained by transmission electron microscopy. Despite fairly long service in most cases (median 9.5 yr; range 32–4 yr) the concentrations of chrysotile fibres were relatively low: only two cases exceeded 1.14 million fibres/g dried lung. Tremolite fibre levels were even lower: less than 1 million fibres/g dried lung in all but one case. Tremolite fibre concentrations exceeded those of chrysotile in only two cases. These results support the contention that South African chrysotile is not heavily contaminated by tremolite. "

Digital



Bookmarks