Block 5: Silicosis and Coal Workers� Pneumoconiosis - The Natural History Of Silicosis And Its Complications.

THE NATURAL HISTORY OF SILICOSIS AND ITS COMPLICATIONS:

The figure above presents data from a study of SA goldminers that illustrates the natural history of simple silicosis and PMF.

Simple silicosis and PMF are uncommon with less than 10 years of underground dust exposure, suggesting that this is approximately the time required to accumulate a sufficient lung dust burden to manifest silicosis. Silicosis risk and risk of PMF increases with further exposure.

The graph on the right introduces the concept of the duration that the dust is resident in the lung, latency. Simple silicosis does not usually appear before 10 years since starting exposure, whilst PMF appears 20 years after starting exposure. With longer latency, risk of silicosis and PMF increases.

      
The X-ray and detail above represent a low profusion of simple silicotic nodules.        The X-ray above illustrates a higher profusion of simple, nodular silicosis.
      
The X-ray on the left is is an example of PMF. The detail shows the typical features of the upper lobe masses (>1 cm) that develop in PMF as the simple nodules aggregate.        Tuberculosis is one of the most important complications of silicosis (also discussed under TB and occupation).

      
The two X-rays above show typical radiological features of both tuberculosis and simple silicosis.

Acute variants of silicosis:

Acute variants of silicosis also occur, although these are rare:

Other silica associated diseases:

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Postgraduate Diploma in Occupational Health (DOH) - Modules 3 � 5: Occupational Medicine & Toxicology by Prof Rodney Ehrlich & Prof Mohamed Jeebhay is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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