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Mineralogy of Lung Tissue in Dental Laboratory Technicians' Pneumoconiosis
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1999
Year
AsthmaOccupational ToxicologySilica ParticlesOccupational Lung DiseasesEnvironmental Lung DiseasesRespiratory ToxicologyLung DepositionInhalation ToxicologyRespiratory ExposurePleural EffusionIndoor Air QualityMedicineLung BiopsyRadiologyLung Tissue
This article reports on a case of pneumoconiosis in a dental laboratory technician with a history of respiratory exposure to dental materials. Special attention is paid to the mineralogical analysis of the lung biopsy. The abundance of chromium, cobalt, and silica particles suggests that the dental technician's pneumoconiosis is the result of the combined effects of hard metal dusts and silica particles generated during finishing dental frameworks. Adequate technical protection such as a local ventilation system should be considered in dental laboratories to prevent respiratory exposure of dental technicians to airborne contaminants.