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Pneumoconiosis

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Pneumoconiosis
Classifications and external resources
ICD-10 J60.-J65.
ICD-9 500-505

Pneumoconiosis, also known as miner's lung, is a lung condition caused by the inhalation of dust, characterized by formation of nodular fibrotic changes in lungs. Many substances can cause pneumoconiosis including asbestos, silica, talc, kaolinite and other metal compounds.

Depending on the type of dust, variants of the disease are considered. For example there are silicosis, also known as grinders' disease; and pneumosilicosis, which is caused by the inhalation of the dust of stone, sand, or flint containing silica. Because many common minerals contain silica, there are different types of silicosis. The term "pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" was coined in 1935 as the putative longest word in the English language, but means exactly the same as pneumoconiosis.

Pneumoconiosis in combination with multiple pulmonary rheumatoid nodules in rheumatoid arthritis patients is known as Caplan's syndrome.<ref>Andreoli, Thomas, ed. CECIL Essentials of Medicine. Saunders: Pennsylvania, 2004. p. 737.</ref>

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[edit] Incidents

The Hawk's Nest incident in West Virginia during the Great Depression was one of the earliest and most prominent incidents of large-scale silicosis deaths. But while stringent occupational safety reforms have largely eliminated it in Europe, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) in the United States estimates that a million workers remain at risk to silicosis, 100,000 of whom are at high risk. They estimate 59,000 will develop adverse effects.

But due to pressure from industry groups, its effects are little known and hardly acted upon. A 1992 Houston Chronicle investigation found "silicosis is often misdiagnosed by doctors, disdained by industry officials and unknown to the very workers who stand the greatest chance of getting it. ... Old warnings and medical studies have been ignored, products falsely advertised and government rules flouted--especially with regard to sandblasting, an activity so hazardous that NIOSH recommended its banning in 1974."

[edit] Types

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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[edit] External links

fr:Pneumoconiose ko:진폐 it:Pneumoconiosi nl:Pneumoconiose ja:塵肺 pl:Pylica płuc sv:Dammlunga

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