Publication | Closed Access
RESPIRATORY DISEASE MORTALITY AMONG URANIUM MINERS
137
Citations
6
References
1976
Year
Indian Uranium MinersRadiation ExposurePathologyTobacco ControlLife-table MethodOncologyRespiratory ToxicologyEnvironmental HealthToxicologyPublic HealthSmoking Related Lung DiseaseRadiologyOccupational Lung DiseasesEnvironmental Lung DiseasesOccupational EpidemiologyLung CancerInhalation ToxicologyMortality AnalysisGlobal HealthBronchial NeoplasmMedicine
A mortality analysis of a group of white and Indian uranium miners was done by a life-table method. A significant excess of respiratory cancer among both whites and Indians was found. Nonmalignant respiratory disease deaths among the whites are approaching cancer in importance as a cause of death, probably as a result of diffuse parenchymal radiation damage. Exposure-response curves for nonsmokers are linear for both respiratory cancer and "other respiratory disease." Cigaret smoking elevates and distorts that curve. Light cigaret smokers appear to be most vulnerable to lung parenchymal damage. The predominant histologic cancer among nonsmokers is small-cell undifferntiated, just as it is among cigaret smokers.
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