Seeking the "Rank Factor" in CWP Incidence: The Potential Role of Respirable Dust Particle Purity (5a2205c4-bc1b-4eac-be6d-bc8a0e95118f)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 231 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1990
Abstract
"INTRODCICTIONThe search for the cause(s) of coal workers' Pneunoconiosis continues despite the vast amount of research that has been undertaken over the past forty to fifty years. Good correlation between the mass of dust inhaled over workers' lifetimes and the incidence of the disease has led to the development of effective environmental standards and implementation of good procedures for the control of dust generation and dispersion in the working place. Research has only begun, however, to uncover the biochemical mechanisms involved in initiating the disease.Correlation between the rank of the coal seam in which miners worked and disease incidence and severity is acknowledged worldwide, but the agents in the higher rank coal seams which cause CWP arc still not defined. The basic components of the coal seams, i.e., the elements and minerals, are generally known, but the way in which they interact with human pulmonary cells is largely still a mystery.The process of disease development is a biochemical one which depends on the characteristics of the pulmonary cells within their immediate biochemical environment and the characteristics of invading respirable coal mine dust particles, probably both chemical and physical ones. The cell-particle relationship, therefore, must be defined, and both cells and particles must be characterized according to properties which potentially are involved in the disease process.Following such characterization, specific respirable dusts from different coal seams, which appear to have different effects on coal workers, must be obtained or constructed and then used in experiments designed to determine dust toxicity or the response of animals exposed to the dusts.The results presented here focus on characterizing properties of respirable coal mine dust particles collected from operating longwalls in West Virginia and Virginia Longwall panels were selected for analysis because the respirable dust in the coal face areas is largely uncontaminated by rock dust and analysis of the dust yields results unconfounded by rock dust."
Citation
APA:
(1990) Seeking the "Rank Factor" in CWP Incidence: The Potential Role of Respirable Dust Particle Purity (5a2205c4-bc1b-4eac-be6d-bc8a0e95118f)MLA: Seeking the "Rank Factor" in CWP Incidence: The Potential Role of Respirable Dust Particle Purity (5a2205c4-bc1b-4eac-be6d-bc8a0e95118f). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1990.