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   English Wikipedia
 
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 Chrysotile, tremolite, and malignant mesothelioma in man Churg AChest  1988[Mar]; 93 (3): 621-8The question of whether chrysotile asbestos ever causes mesothelioma in man has  become a major public and occupational health issue. Review of the literature  suggests that only 53 acceptable cases of chrysotile-induced mesothelioma have  ever been reported; of these, 41 cases have occurred in individuals exposed to  chrysotile mine dust, all of it naturally contaminated with tremolite. Ten cases  have occurred in secondary industry workers, but here the suspicion of amosite or  crocidolite contamination is high. Analysis of lung asbestos content indicates  that induction of mesothelioma by chrysotile requires, on average, as great a  lung fiber burden as induction of asbestosis by chrysotile, whereas amphibole  (amosite or crocidolite)-induced mesotheliomas appear at a several hundred-fold  smaller lung burden. Tremolite alone has definitely produced mesothelioma in man,  particularly when exposure has been to long, high aspect ratio, fibers. Analysis  of tremolite:chrysotile fiber ratios in human lung suggests that some, but not  all tremolite is removed in milling chrysotile ores. The low incidence of  mesothelioma in secondary chrysotile users may reflect the small amount of  tremolite left in the product. These observations indicate that although  chrysotile asbestos can produce mesothelioma in man, the total number of such  cases is small and the required doses extremely large. The data are consistent  with the idea that mesotheliomas seen in chrysotile miners and some secondary  industry workers are produced by the tremolite contained in the chrysotile ore,  but that the short length and low aspect ratio of the tremolite make its  carcinogenicity quite low. However, these data are very indirect, and a role for  the chrysotile fiber itself is still possible.|*Asbestos, Amphibole[MESH]|Asbestos, Serpentine[MESH]|Asbestos/*adverse effects[MESH]|Dose-Response Relationship, Drug[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Lung Neoplasms/*chemically induced/epidemiology[MESH]|Mesothelioma/*chemically induced/epidemiology[MESH]|Mining[MESH]|Occupational Diseases/*chemically induced/epidemiology[MESH]|Particle Size[MESH]|Risk Factors[MESH]|Silicic Acid/*adverse effects[MESH]|Silicon Dioxide/*adverse effects[MESH]|Textile Industry[MESH]
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