Publication | Open Access
A survey of respiratory disease in cotton operatives: Part II. Symptoms, dust estimations, and the effect of smoking habit
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Citations
3
References
1973
Year
AsthmaOccupational Health SciencesAgricultural EconomicsAir QualityRespiratory DiseaseTobacco ControlRespiratory ToxicologyEnvironmental HealthPublic HealthSmoking Related Lung DiseaseAllergyOccupational Lung DiseasesEnvironmental Lung DiseasesCotton OperativesCotton WorkersPart IiInhalation ToxicologyIndoor Air QualityAir PollutionMedicine
<b>Fox, A. J., Tombleson, J. B. L., Watt, A., and Wilkie, A. G. (1973).</b><i>Brit. J. industr. Med.,</i><b>30,</b> 48-53. <b>A survey of respiratory disease in cotton operatives. Part II. Symptoms, dust estimations, and the effect of smoking habits.</b> In association with a survey of cotton workers dust levels were measured in 11 of the mills. Levels varied from 1·15 mg/m<sup>3</sup> to 4·8 mg/m<sup>3</sup> excluding fly. Analysis of the survey of workers in relation to the dust levels showed an increase in abnormal symptoms and a greater reduction in ventilatory function in those exposed to the higher dust concentrations. No such relationship was found between dust concentration and prevalence of bronchitic symptoms. Smokers showed a higher frequency of byssinotic symptoms and a greater loss of ventilatory function than non-smokers at all levels of dust exposure. The correlation between dust levels and the frequency of byssinotic symptoms and the loss of ventilatory function was increased by including a time factor. By expressing the dust exposure as mg years/m<sup>3</sup> it can be predicted that approximately 10% of subjects exposed to 0·5 mg/m<sup>3</sup> of dust for 40 years will have the symptoms of byssinosis.
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