Literature DB >> 18071741

Retrospective exposure assessment for respirable and inhalable dust, crystalline silica and arsenic in the former German uranium mines of SAG/SDAG Wismut.

D Dahmann1, H-D Bauer, G Stoyke.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Starting shortly after the reunification of Germany and lasting up to the end of the 1990s, an extensive series of retrospective exposure investigations for the East German uranium mining industry was performed in order to provide information about the exposure situation of the miners towards respirable dust, inhalable dust, crystalline silica and heavy metals. It should provide the necessary information for legal compensation of miners with potential industrial diseases as well as for epidemiological research.
METHODS: Extensive side-by-side measurements using original historic equipments as well as comprehensive evaluation of the time increments of specific jobs with respect to exposure relevant tasks were performed. After attributing average exposures to the tasks, shift exposures for the jobs could be calculated.
RESULTS: By the end a comprehensive job exposure matrix for all underground jobs of the German uranium mining industry was developed for the components mentioned, including arsenic where relevant. In the early days of SAG/SDAG Wismut dust and silica exposures were extremely high with respirable dust up to 20 mg/m(3) and respirable crystalline silica well above 2 mg/m(3) as shift averages. Beginning from about the early 1960s dust control measures started to improve conditions dramatically.
CONCLUSIONS: It is absolutely necessary to invest sufficient effort for the estimation of exposure situations of past technological environments. Especially, the situation of early mechanised mining, characterised by low ventilation, dry drilling techniques and generally lacking dust control measures was characterized by extreme shift exposures. It is important to keep these in mind when metal mining exposure in different environments is considered.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18071741     DOI: 10.1007/s00420-007-0287-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int Arch Occup Environ Health        ISSN: 0340-0131            Impact factor:   3.015


  5 in total

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Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  2001-11

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Review 3.  Assessment of exposure in epidemiological studies: the example of silica dust.

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Review 4.  Pooled exposure-response analyses and risk assessment for lung cancer in 10 cohorts of silica-exposed workers: an IARC multicentre study.

Authors:  K Steenland; A Mannetje; P Boffetta; L Stayner; M Attfield; J Chen; M Dosemeci; N DeKlerk; E Hnizdo; R Koskela; H Checkoway
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5.  Silica exposure and silicosis among Ontario hardrock miners: II. Exposure estimates.

Authors:  D K Verma; A Sebestyen; J A Julian; D C Muir; H Schmidt; C D Bernholz; H S Shannon
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  5 in total
  14 in total

1.  Differences in baseline lung cancer mortality between the German uranium miners cohort and the population of the former German Democratic Republic (1960-2003).

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2.  Dust is in the air: effects of occupational exposure to mineral dust on lung function in a 9-year study.

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3.  Mortality from internal and external radiation exposure in a cohort of male German uranium millers, 1946-2008.

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4.  Radon and risk of death from cancer and cardiovascular diseases in the German uranium miners cohort study: follow-up 1946-2003.

Authors:  Michaela Kreuzer; B Grosche; M Schnelzer; A Tschense; F Dufey; L Walsh
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5.  Mechanistic study on lung cancer mortality after radon exposure in the Wismut cohort supports important role of clonal expansion in lung carcinogenesis.

Authors:  I Zaballa; M Eidemüller
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6.  Major histopathological patterns of lung cancer related to arsenic exposure in German uranium miners.

Authors:  Dirk Taeger; Georg Johnen; Thorsten Wiethege; Soile Tapio; Matthias Möhner; Horst Wesch; Andrea Tannapfel; Klaus-Michael Müller; Thomas Brüning; Beate Pesch
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7.  Mortality in Underground Miners in a Former Uranium Ore Mine–Results of a Cohort Study Among Former Employees of Wismut AG in Saxony and Thuringia.

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10.  Quantitative relationship between silica exposure and lung cancer mortality in German uranium miners, 1946-2003.

Authors:  M Sogl; D Taeger; D Pallapies; T Brüning; F Dufey; M Schnelzer; K Straif; L Walsh; M Kreuzer
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