Clinical, pathological and mineralogical features in two autopsy cases of workers exposed to agalmatolite dust

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Abstract

An agalmatolite miner and processor showed large shadows at the bilateral hila accompanied by surrounding emphysematous changes and irregular shadows on chest X-ray films. Chest CT scans were characterized by a mixture of tiny irregular structures and small round opacities. Histopathological examination revealed massive fibrosis, which corresponded to large shadows, but only a small number of typical silicotic nodules, indicating mixed dust pneumoconiosis. Mineralogical examination of the autopsy lungs showed quartz, pyrophyllite, mica, and kaolinite. Quartz accounted for 70% of the amount of all mineral dust in both patients, but pyrophyllite accounted for 10.8% and 14.4%. The pulmonary mineral dust composition in the two patients was well consistent with the mineral composition of the raw clays in the agalmatolite mine. In the two patients, chest X-ray findings and histopathological findings of the lungs also suggested agalmatolite pneumoconiosis, which was confirmed by mineral analysis of the lungs.

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APA

Kishimoto, T., Yamamoto, H., Morinaga, K., Yamawaki, Y., Yoshimoto, T., Miyashita, T., … Shinohara, Y. (1999). Clinical, pathological and mineralogical features in two autopsy cases of workers exposed to agalmatolite dust. Industrial Health, 37(4), 432–439. https://doi.org/10.2486/indhealth.37.432

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