asbestos--amosite has been researched along with Foreign-Bodies* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for asbestos--amosite and Foreign-Bodies
Article | Year |
---|---|
An assessment of asbestos body formation in extrapulmonary sites: liver and spleen.
Asbestos bodies (ABs) form as asbestos fibers become coated by a cellular iron- and protein-rich matrix. ABs have been reported in lymph nodes and a few extrapulmonary sites, but no data exist as to their formation outside of the lung. It is not clear whether the AB found in these extrapulmonary areas have been transported as mature structures from the lung or formed at the extrapulmonary site. This study was designed to determine if ABs are produced in extrapulmonary sites. The guinea pig efficiently forms ferruginous bodies in the lung and so it was chosen as a model to test the coating efficiency of amosite asbestos fibers in lung, liver and spleen.. Sized amosite asbestos (5 mg) was administered either endotracheally into lung (n = 2) or directly into liver (n = 4) and spleen (n = 4) of healthy 10-week-old male guinea pigs. The lung, liver and splenic tissues were removed at 40 and 180 days post inoculation and were examined histologically for the presence of AB via light microscopy. Uncoated fibers isolated from the tissues were characterized by electron microscopy. The coating efficiency was calculated as a ratio of uncoated/coated fibers per organ.. The coating efficiency ratios of fibers that were collected at 40 days post-injection from the individual sites were: lung - 350:1, liver - 4200:1, and spleen - 220,000:1. At 6 months post-injection the ratios for the individual sites consisted of: lung - 176:1, liver - 11,000:1, and spleen - 1000:1.. This study indicates that AB can be formed in extrapulmonary sites and that the coating efficiency in the lung is much greater than that within the liver or spleen. Topics: Animals; Asbestos, Amosite; Asbestosis; Disease Models, Animal; Ferritins; Foreign Bodies; Guinea Pigs; Liver; Lung; Male; Mineral Fibers; Spleen | 2001 |
Carcinoma of the colon in asbestos-exposed workers: analysis of asbestos content in colon tissue.
Epidemiological studies have indicated an increased incidence of carcinoma of the colon in asbestos workers. The present study evaluated the colon tissue asbestos burden, by light and electron microscopic analytic techniques, in patients with a history of occupational asbestos exposure and colon cancer. Asbestos fibers and/or asbestos bodies were present in colon tissue from 14 of 44 (31.8%) asbestos workers with colon carcinoma (range 142,199 to 15,231, 543 fibers/g/wet weight, mean 2,517,823). Chrysotile was identified in 9 patients and amosite in 3 patients. Both amosite and chrysotile were found in the colonic wall in one individual. Other forms of asbestos (e.g., crocidolite, tremolite, or anthophyllite) were not found. Asbestos fibers and asbestos bodies were not found in colon tissue from 20 control patients (colon carcinoma and no asbestos exposure). Asbestos fibers frequently enter and reside in the wall of the colon and are often intimately associated with tumor tissue at the site of colon carcinoma in workers with asbestos exposure and colon carcinoma. Topics: Asbestos; Asbestos, Amosite; Asbestos, Serpentine; Colon; Colonic Neoplasms; Foreign Bodies; Humans; Microscopy, Electron; Occupational Diseases | 1991 |