39 research outputs found

    Silica-induced pleural disease: An unusual case mimicking malignant mesothelioma

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    PubMedID: 9367490A 57-year-old man with a history of exposure to silica for 32 years presented with pleural thickening of the lower lobe of the left lung and a chronic right-sided pleural effusion without any radiographic evidence of parenchymal nodules in either lung. Light microscopic examination of a left visceral pleural biopsy specimen revealed markedly thickened pleura with fibrosis and macrophages containing birefringent silica and silicates. Occasional rounded intrapleural silicotic nodules were present. The underlying lung tissue did not show fibrosis or silicotic nodules. An energy- dispersive x-ray analysis confirmed the presence of silica. In the absence of lung involvement, this case represents a very unusual pathologic reaction caused by silica and silicates and adds to the clinical differential diagnosis of chronic pleuritis and malignant mesothelioma

    Analysis of Tissue Mineral Fiber Content

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    Environmental malignant mesothelioma in Southern Anatolia: A study of fifty cases

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    PubMedID: 11102295Malignant mesothelioma is a highly aggressive tumor of the serous membranes, which in humans results from exposure to asbestos and asbestiform fibers. Although occupational malignant mesothelioma is still the most common form of this lesion, naturally contaminated soil can play an important role in the development of environmental malignant mesothelioma in some parts of the world. Fifty cases of malignant mesothelioma (MM) from southern Turkey with no occupational history of asbestos exposure were reviewed regarding pathologic and clinical features. A case of hyaline fibrous plaque of the pleura was also included in this series. Histologically the cases were classified as epithelial (36 cases); sarcomatous (7 cases); and biphasic (7 cases). One of the sarcomatous cases was desmoplastic. Ultrastructural examination of the tumor tissue in three cases revealed long-surface microvilli in epithelial cells. Intersititial cells of the lung in one case showed electron-dense asbestos fibers in the cytoplasm. Mineralogical analyses of the lung tissue in three cases of MM and the case of pleural plaque showed high amounts of asbestos fibers most consistent with tremolite and actinolite. The clinical and pathologic features of our cases support that the environmental inhalation of asbestos is still a major health problem in some parts of Turkey
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