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- K Hiroshima, Y Murai, Y Suzuki, B Goldstein, and I Webster.
- Department of Community Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029-6574.
- Am. J. Ind. Med. 1993 Jun 1; 23 (6): 883-901.
AbstractChanges in the dimensions of inhaled asbestos fibers in the lung and translocation of intrapulmonary asbestos fibers into mesothelial tissues were investigated in 17 baboons (5 exposed to amosite, 4 to chrysotile, 5 to crocidolite, and 3 unexposed). The animals received different cumulative doses of asbestos by inhalation, followed by varying recovery periods (0-69 months). All asbestos types induced pulmonary asbestosis with severity directly related to the cumulative dose. There were a larger number of asbestos bodies in the lung of the amphibole-exposed animals than in those exposed to chrysotile. A tissue burden study, using transmission electron microscopy on 25-microns paraffin sections, ashed in a low-temperature asher, was performed. Intrapulmonary amosite fibers were shorter in geometric mean length compared with a standard amosite sample (UICC) (3.3 microns). In explanation, it was considered that long fibers might not be able to reach the lower respiratory tract and/or long fibers might be fragmented into shorter fibers. Further, in the amosite-exposed group, the mean length of intrapulmonary fibers increased with the extension of recovery period, suggesting that shorter fibers had been cleared from the lung. The chrysotile standard sample (UICC) had a shorter geometric mean length (1.1 microns) than amosite. The mean length of intrapulmonary chrysotile did not noticeably change with the extension of inhalation and recovery periods; however, the mean width decreased with the extension of these periods. This finding strongly suggested that separation of thick chrysotile fibers had occurred in the lung. The crocidolite standard sample (Transvaal) had a shorter geometric mean length (1.4 microns) than amosite.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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