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Toxicological and epidemiological studies on effects of airborne fibers: coherence and public [corrected] health implications.

Abstract
Airborne fibers, when sufficiently biopersistent, can cause chronic pleural diseases, as well as excess pulmonary fibrosis and lung cancers. Mesothelioma and pleural plaques are caused by biopersistent fibers thinner than ∼0.1 μm and longer than ∼5 μm. Excess lung cancer and pulmonary fibrosis are caused by biopersistent fibers that are longer than ∼20 μm. While biopersistence varies with fiber type, all amphibole and erionite fibers are sufficiently biopersistent to cause pathogenic effects, while the greater in vivo solubility of chrysotile fibers makes them somewhat less causal for the lung diseases, and much less causal for the pleural diseases. Most synthetic vitreous fibers are more soluble in vivo than chrysotile, and pose little, if any, health pulmonary or pleural health risk, but some specialty SVFs were sufficiently biopersistent to cause pathogenic effects in animal studies. My conclusions are based on the following: 1) epidemiologic studies that specified the origin of the fibers by type, and especially those that identified their fiber length and diameter distributions; 2) laboratory-based toxicologic studies involving fiber size characterization and/or dissolution rates and long-term observation of biological responses; and 3) the largely coherent findings of the epidemiology and the toxicology. The strong dependence of effects on fiber diameter, length, and biopersistence makes reliable routine quantitative exposure and risk assessment impractical in some cases, since it would require transmission electronic microscopic examination, of representative membrane filter samples, for determining statistically sufficient numbers of fibers longer than 5 and 20 μm, and those thinner than 0.1 μm, based on the fiber types.
AuthorsMorton Lippmann
JournalCritical reviews in toxicology (Crit Rev Toxicol) Vol. 44 Issue 8 Pg. 643-95 (Sep 2014) ISSN: 1547-6898 [Electronic] England
PMID25168068 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural, Review)
Chemical References
  • Air Pollutants
  • Asbestos, Serpentine
  • Particulate Matter
Topics
  • Air Pollutants (chemistry, pharmacokinetics, toxicity)
  • Animals
  • Asbestos, Serpentine (chemistry, toxicity)
  • Epidemiologic Studies
  • Humans
  • Inhalation Exposure (adverse effects)
  • Lung Neoplasms (chemically induced, epidemiology)
  • Mesothelioma (chemically induced, epidemiology)
  • Particulate Matter (pharmacokinetics, toxicity)
  • Public Health
  • Pulmonary Fibrosis (chemically induced, epidemiology)
  • Risk Assessment
  • Solubility

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