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Published byMarjorie Austin Modified over 9 years ago
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Presented by: Najafi AZ, MD
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Respiratory tract a common site of occupational injury Two sites: ◦ Airways ◦ Parenchyma Site of injury depends on: ◦ Gas solubility ◦ Particle size
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History Physical exam Pulmonary function tests: ◦ Spirometry ◦ Body plethysmography ◦ DLCO Imaging: ◦ Chest X ray ◦ HRCT
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Short-term exposure to high concentration of gases, fumes, or mists Generally as an accident Irritation of membranes Chemical pneumonitis ARDS Chmicals: ◦ Formaldehyde ◦ Cadmium salts ◦ chlorine
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Upper respiratory tract irritation Cough Stridor Hoarseness Wheezing PFT: normal, obstructive, mixed Chest X ray: normal to pulmonary edema
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Reversible airway obstruction, with airway inflammation and bronchial hyperresponsiveness as a consequence of occupational exposures
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Work-related asthma(WRA) Occupational asthma caused by work(OA) Sensitizer induced asthma Irritant induced asthma Work- exacerbated asthma
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Sensitizer-induced ◦ Type 1 immune reaction (IgE) ◦ Latent period for sensitization ◦ In a percent of workers Irritant-induced ◦ RADS Without latency Exposure to a high concentration In most workers
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History: ◦ Hx of dyspnea (exertional), cough, in an episodic mode, night symptoms Physical exam ◦ wheezing PFT ◦ Spirometry: normal or obstructive ◦ BD test: mostly responsive Chest X ray ◦ Not helpful
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Current health (during the last 4 weeks) If you run or climb stairs fast do you ever: Cough? Wheeze? Get tight in the chest? Yes/no Is you sleep ever broken by: Wheeze? Difficulty with breathing? Yes/no Do you ever wake up in the morning with: wheeze? Difficulty with breathing? Yes/no Do you ever wheeze: If you are in a smoky room? If you are in a very dusty place? Yes/no Screening questionnaire
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I. Occupational symptoms. II. Serial P.E.F III. Serial spirometry IV. Challenge test
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Reduction or elimination of exposure Beta agonists corticosteriods
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1. Substitution 2. Ventilation 3. Change of procedure 4. Restriction of employment 5. Free from smoke 6. Accidental education 7. Environmental screening 8. Protective devices
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A type of O-ILDs. Due to inhalation and deposition of mineral dust within lung parenchyma. Induce tissue reaction May cause disruption of alveolar architecture or collagen fibrosis.
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Deposition of mineral dusts in lung tissue. Presence of parenchymal tissue reaction Positive chest x-ray findings PFT may be abnormal depending on the stage and severity and complications.
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Benign: ◦ Asymptomatic ◦ Normal spirometric findings Collageneous: ◦ Symptomatic ◦ Abnormal spirometric findings
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Sufficient and reasonable exposure. (intensity and duration) Positive chest x-ray findings (good quality is required) No other concomitant diseases that mimic pneumoconiosis.
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Silicosis Asbestosis Coal-workers ’ pneumoconiosis
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Silicosis
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A collagenous pneumoconiosis caused by inhalation of respirable (0.2 – 10 µ m ) free crystalline silicon dioxide ( SiO2 ). Chronic diffuse interstitial fibronodular lung disease. High-dose and long-time inhalation is required. A strict dose-response relationship is present Cumulative exposure Intensity × duration
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Removal of stone Hard rock mining Tunnel drilling Stone quarrying Processing stone or sand Stone crushing Granite carving
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Minning Foundry work Sand blasting Ceramics
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Abrasive use of silica or sand Abrasive blasting Foundry casting Knife sharpening Production of fine silica powder
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Utilization of sand or silica powder ◦ Glass manufacture ◦ Plastic manufacture ◦ Paint manufacture ◦ Pottery ◦ Ceramic manufacture ◦ Construction work
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Chronic bronchitis Emphysema Silicosis Tuberculosis Lung cancer Collagen vascular diseases
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Chronic simple ( classic ) silicosis Chronic complicated ( PMF ) silicosis Accelerated silicosis Acute silicosis
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Moderate long-time exposure (at least 10 yr) to less than 30% quartz Symptoms and signs: ◦ Mostly asymptomatic ◦ Chronic productive cough or DOE due to chronic bronchitis ◦ Progressive DOE and dry cough (late finding) ◦ Ph. exam normal or crackles ◦ PFT: normal or restrictive (mainly) obstructive or mixed pattern ◦ CXRay: small (<1 cm), round nodules predominantly in upper lobes, hilar lymphadenopathy and calcification
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Progressive massive fibrosis Tuberculosis(3-fold to 20-fold) Pulmonary and extrapulmonary Typical and atypical mycobacteria Immune-mediated Scleroderma (m/c) SLE, RA, … Renal (GN, nephrotic syndrome)(usually in heavy exposure) Lung cancer Fungal diseases Cryptococcus Blastomycosis coccidiopmycosis
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Silicosis Calcified lymph nodes Upper lobe nodules
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Silica exp. & TB Incidence of TB is greater in accelerated or acute Silicosis Silica exp. in the absence of silicosis is risk factor for TB Silica exp. : Risk for TB Radiographic changes in silicosis frequency of TB frequency of TB Silica exp. & TB: Death 4 yrs earlier than TB alone
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Cont. TB & silicosis Cont. TB & silicosis Dx : rapid worsening of CXR, decline in lung function suspicion for TB regular PPD skin test (yearly ) PPD(+) without active TB, indicated at least 1 yr INH prophylaxis.
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Diagnosis Diagnosis 1-History of silica exp. 2-Chest radiography consist with silicosis. 3-R/O other illness that mimic silicosis. HRCT & Lung biopsy (open) if …
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Prevention Product substitution of silica with less toxic particles Engineering control of dust concentration Appropriate use of respiratory protective devices Medical screening: questionnaire, CXR, spirometry
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WHO recommendation: CXR : At baseline, after 2-3 years of exposure, At baseline, after 2-3 years of exposure, then every 2-5 years. then every 2-5 years. Spirometry + questionnaire : At baseline, then annually or at the same frequency as CXR. At baseline, then annually or at the same frequency as CXR.
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Management Diagnosis of silicosis Remove Regular CXR and PPD skin test Steroid helpful in Acute S. or autoimmune dis. (+ INH prophylaxis) Whole lung lavage for acute silicosis ? Tetrandrine Lung trasplantation
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Crystalline silica (quartz, cristobalite) is carcinogen (group 1 IARC) Silicosis is associated with autoimmune disease (RA, SLE, Scleroderma)
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Pipe covering Asbestos cloth Cements Roofing materials
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Clinical presentation: exertional dyspnea,, cough, chest pain, clubbing X Ray: reticular veiling lower lobes, ground glass pleural changes, PMF in mixed exposure, Lung fx: restrictive, diffusion ↓, hypoxemia,
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Coal worker's pneumoconiosis (CWP) can be defined as the accumulation of coal dust in the lungs and the tissue's reaction to its presence: simple CWP (SCWP) pulmonary massive fibrosis (PMF)
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Radiology: nodular veiling upper lung zones, nodules > 1 cm indicative of PMF Lung fx: normal – simple type restrictive – complicated type Prognosis: simple type – good complicated type – cardio-respiratory failure
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Immunologically mediated inflammatory disease of lung parenchyma caused by some organic dusts
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History ◦ Acute: cough, fever, chills, malaise, dyspnea after an acute exposure ◦ Chronic Physical exam ” ◦ Basilar inspiratory crackles PFT: ◦ Restrictive or mixed pattern, low DLCO CXray: ◦ normal, reticulonodular pattern, infiltration
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Avoidance of exposure Corticosteroids
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OCCUPATIONAL LUNG DISEASES ARE PREVENTABLE
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Complex exposures
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