Literature DB >> 3201186

Mortality among pyrite miners with low-level exposure to radon daughters.

G Battista1, S Belli, F Carboncini, P Comba, G Levante, P Sartorelli, F Strambi, F Valentini, O Axelson.   

Abstract

Mortality among pyrite miners with low-level exposure to radon daughters. Scand J Work Environ Health 14 (1988) 280-285. A cohort mortality study was conducted with regard to a pyrite mine located in central Italy. Exposure to radon ranged from 0.12 to 0.36 working levels (WL) in the work areas; most measurements were around 0.2 WL. The concentration of free silica in the dust was less than 2%. The cohort was determined from company files and included 1,899 subjects. Mortality was studied for the years 1965-1983. The loss to follow-up was less than 2%. The standardized mortality ratio for all causes and all neoplasms was 97 and 107, respectively. That for lung cancer and for nonmalignant respiratory diseases was 131 (95% confidence interval 97-175) and 173 (95% confidence interval 135-231), respectively. It was estimated that the extra cases of lung cancer attributable to radon daughters numbered 13 per 10(6) person-years and working level month in the whole cohort and 21.3 per 10(6) person-years in the subcohort with 10-25 years of exposure.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3201186     DOI: 10.5271/sjweh.1919

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Work Environ Health        ISSN: 0355-3140            Impact factor:   5.024


  9 in total

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3.  Mortality from lung cancer among silicotic patients in Sardinia: an update study with 10 more years of follow up.

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4.  Silica exposure, silicosis, and lung cancer: a mortality study of South African gold miners.

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Review 5.  Does occupational exposure to dust prevent colorectal cancer?

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6.  Occupational exposures as risk factors for gastric cancer in Italy.

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Review 7.  Occupational cancer in Italy.

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Review 8.  Exposure to Residential Radon and COPD: A Systematic Review.

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Review 9.  Cancer risks from exposure to radon in homes.

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  9 in total

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