Concentration and fiber size of asbestos in lungs of residents living close to the serpentinite area

Journal: [Nihon Koshu Eisei Zasshi] Japanese Journal Of Public Health
Published:
Abstract

Concentrations and fiber size distribution of asbestos in the lung tissue of 16 ( 8 males and 8 females) rural residents living close to the serpentinite area (neighboring group) were analyzed by low temperature ashing-analytical transmission electron microscopy, and were compared with those of 5 (5 males) rural and 53 (34 males and 19 females) urban residents living away from the serpentinite area (reference group). The results are as follows; 1. Pulmonary asbestos fibers were found in all rural residents. The types of asbestos fibers were chrysotile, amosite, crocidolite, actinolite, and tremolite. These findings were very similar to results for urban residents. 2. In males, the geometric mean concentration of actinolite-tremolite in the neighboring group (1.78 x 10(6) fibers/g dry lung) was significantly higher than those in the reference groups (rural: 0.32 x 10(6), urban: 0.31 x 10(6), p < 0.01). In females also, the geometric mean concentration of actinolite-tremolite in the neighboring group (0.59 x 10(6)) was significantly higher than that in the reference group (urban: 0.16 x 10(6), p < 0.05). There were no significant differences in the actinolite-tremolite concentrations between males and females in the neighboring group. 3. The serpentinite in this area have contained not only chrysotile but also both actinolite and tremolite. There was no significant relationship between actinolite-tremolite concentration and occupational history in the neighboring group. It is possible that actinolite and tremolite are liberated from the serpentinite to the atmosphere and inhaled by the residents near the serpentinite area which increases pulmonary actinolite-tremolite concentration. 4. The difference in the geometric mean concentration of chrysotile between the neighboring and the reference group was not statistically significant for both sexes, possibly due to the poor durability of chrysotile in the lung tissue. 5. There were no significant differences in the geometric mean of fiber length and diameter of actinolite-tremolite between the neighboring and the reference group.

Authors
K Sakai, N Hisanaga, M Okuno, N Kohyama, Y Shinohara, E Shibata, M Kamijima, K Yamanaka, Y Takeuchi