2015
DOI: 10.2486/indhealth.2013-0032
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Case of accelerated silicosis in a sandblaster

Abstract: Sandblasting is traditionally known as a high-risk profession for potential development of lung silicosis. Reported is a case of a sandblaster with confirmed accelerated silicosis, a condition rather rarely diagnosed in the Czech Republic. Initially, the patient presented with progressive dry cough and exertional dyspnoea. In the early diagnostic process, a possible occupational aetiology was considered given his occupational history and known high-risk exposure to respirable silica particles confirmed by indu… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
13
0
1

Year Published

2016
2016
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6
2

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 20 publications
(14 citation statements)
references
References 24 publications
0
13
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Silicotic lesions were also seen in 11 of 13 cases. Notably, two cases showed focal alveolar proteinosis (see Figure E1B), together with interstitial inflammation and silicotic nodules showing varying degrees of maturity, features consistent with accelerated silicosis (17). One of these miners had only 10 years of exposure as a surface worker, while the other had worked for 37 years as a roof bolter.…”
Section: Original Articlementioning
confidence: 87%
“…Silicotic lesions were also seen in 11 of 13 cases. Notably, two cases showed focal alveolar proteinosis (see Figure E1B), together with interstitial inflammation and silicotic nodules showing varying degrees of maturity, features consistent with accelerated silicosis (17). One of these miners had only 10 years of exposure as a surface worker, while the other had worked for 37 years as a roof bolter.…”
Section: Original Articlementioning
confidence: 87%
“…There is hardly any information in the literature about accelerated and extrapulmonary silicosis. Only some isolated cases but no large series have been reported 12–14. In addition, the coexistence of multiorgan involvement including bone marrow is exceptional in silicosis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although returned lavage fluid from patients with acute silicoproteinosis has classically been reported to be a milky effluent with positive periodic‐acid Schiff stain, cases from more recent outbreaks rarely describe this finding …”
Section: Diagnosis Of Acute and Accelerated Silicosis In Modern Indusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All had died by the end of the 3-year follow-up. 56 Thirty-two men screened in a small agate mill in Guangzhou, China, found 15 cases of accelerated silicosis (prevalence of 47%) 27 3 ‡ 40-52 -2 (67%) Iran (2000-2007) 28 23 § 29 (13.7) 2 (0.6) 10 (43%) Italy (2004-2008) 29 1 ¶ 54 4 1 UK (2015) 30 6 ‡ 33.8 (5.9) 13 (5.3) 0 Iran (2017) 31 48 41 46 § 33 (29-37) 11 (9-17) 1 (2%) USA (2014) 42 1 ¶ 37 10 0 USA (1999-2003) 43 35 § --35 (100%) Italy (2015) 44 3 ‡ 48 (3.5) 13 (6) 0 Israel (2016) 45 47 19 § 47 (13.33) 11 (3.58) -Belgium (2018) 48 2 ‡ -<10 0 Australia (2018) 49 7 § 44 (26-61) 7 (4-10) 1 LTx (1%) Sandblaster Spain (2015) 50 1 ¶ 27 5 1 Czech Republic (2015) 51 1 ¶ 38 3.2 1 Turkey (2018) 52 1 ¶ 28 2 0 USA (2018) † † 53 101 § ---Stone crusher India (2015) 54 1 2 8 1 0 India (2015) 55 1 3 5 2 0 Jewellery and semi-precious stone workers India (2015) 56 19 -3.4 (1.7) 12 (63%) Brazil (2017) 57 57 32 12.5 6 (11%) China (2018) 34 15 (47% prevalence) 29 (4.9) 3.5 (1.7)…”
Section: Jewellery Polishersmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation