| Literature DB >> 25419224 |
Joachim Schneider1, Bernd Brückel1, Ludger Fink2, Hans-Joachim Woitowitz1.
Abstract
An 81-year-old woman was dying from histologically confirmed pulmonary fibrosis without having had any asbestos exposure in the workplace. The lung dust fibre analysis showed significantly increased "asbestos bodies" (AB) (2,640 AB per gram of wet lung tissue) and asbestos fibre concentrations (8,600,000 amphibole fibres of all lengths and 540,000 amphibole fibres with a length ≥5 μm per gram of dry lung tissue). Asbestos exposure was revealed to have occurred during household contact after 27 years of washing her husband's industrial clothing that had been contaminated by asbestos at his workplace in an asbestos textile factory. Household asbestos dust exposure as a risk or co-factor in the aetiology of the fatal pulmonary fibrosis is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Asbestos; Household contact; Indoor air pollution; Lung dust fibre burden; Lung fibrosis
Year: 2014 PMID: 25419224 PMCID: PMC4240834 DOI: 10.1186/s12995-014-0039-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Med Toxicol ISSN: 1745-6673 Impact factor: 2.646
Figure 1H&E-stained histological section showing severe interstitial fibrosis with disorganisation of lung structure, temporal heterogeneity with mature scars (insert A, Masson-Goldner staining), immature fibroblastic foci (insert B, 100×), and honeycombing (40×; C).
Figure 2Scattered asbestos bodies showing a fibrous core coated by iron-containing material within the fibrotic tissue (insert A and B), Prussian blue staining (400×).
Figure 3Lung dust analysis. Photograph of A) a crocidolite fibre, B) a ferruginous body (TEM 10,000 x) with C) diffraction pattern and D) element spectrum.