AbstractSilicosis is an interstitial lung disease developing as a result of inhalation of inorganic silica particles. In silicosis cases developing as a result of environmental and occupational exposure, an increase is observed in Turkey especially depending upon denim sandblasting. We present a 35-year-old female case who was applied to our hospital due to complaint of progressive dyspnea, had a history of working in denim sandblasting for 18 months, were diagnosed with silicosis as a result of high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) and diagnosed with lung adenocarcinoma as a result of transbronchial lung biopsy made due to clinical deterioration and radiological progression within three months. The purpose of this report was to point ...
Silicosis is a preventable occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable crystall...
Cancer of the lung was found in 37 cases out of 229 autopsies of silicosis at the Iwamizawa Rosai Ho...
Background: In 1997, a Monograph from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classif...
AbstractSilicosis is an interstitial lung disease developing as a result of inhalation of inorganic ...
Silicosis is an interstitial lung disease developing as a result of inhalation of inorganic silica p...
To clarify any causal relationship between lung cancer and silicosis, we studied clinicopathological...
BACKGROUNDThe course of denim sandblasting silicosis is unknown. We aimed to reevaluate former sandb...
Takashi Sato,1 Takeshi Shimosato,2 Dennis M Klinman3 1Department of Pulmonology, Yokohama City Unive...
The mortality of 724 subjects with silicosis, first diagnosed in 1964-70 in the Sardinia region of I...
Silicosis may be defined as the disease resulting from chronic occupational exposure to silica dust....
ABSTRACT. The Authors, after a survey of the latest experimental and epidemiological studies concern...
Despite silica dust exposure being one of the earliest recognized causes of lung disease, Australia,...
Silicosis is a potentially fatal, irreversible, ubrotic pulmonary disease that may develop subsequen...
Background: Use of industry and technology must be based on protection of health as well as the envi...
Copyright © 2014 Pritinanda Mishra et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creat...
Silicosis is a preventable occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable crystall...
Cancer of the lung was found in 37 cases out of 229 autopsies of silicosis at the Iwamizawa Rosai Ho...
Background: In 1997, a Monograph from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classif...
AbstractSilicosis is an interstitial lung disease developing as a result of inhalation of inorganic ...
Silicosis is an interstitial lung disease developing as a result of inhalation of inorganic silica p...
To clarify any causal relationship between lung cancer and silicosis, we studied clinicopathological...
BACKGROUNDThe course of denim sandblasting silicosis is unknown. We aimed to reevaluate former sandb...
Takashi Sato,1 Takeshi Shimosato,2 Dennis M Klinman3 1Department of Pulmonology, Yokohama City Unive...
The mortality of 724 subjects with silicosis, first diagnosed in 1964-70 in the Sardinia region of I...
Silicosis may be defined as the disease resulting from chronic occupational exposure to silica dust....
ABSTRACT. The Authors, after a survey of the latest experimental and epidemiological studies concern...
Despite silica dust exposure being one of the earliest recognized causes of lung disease, Australia,...
Silicosis is a potentially fatal, irreversible, ubrotic pulmonary disease that may develop subsequen...
Background: Use of industry and technology must be based on protection of health as well as the envi...
Copyright © 2014 Pritinanda Mishra et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creat...
Silicosis is a preventable occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable crystall...
Cancer of the lung was found in 37 cases out of 229 autopsies of silicosis at the Iwamizawa Rosai Ho...
Background: In 1997, a Monograph from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classif...