1.A systematic review on the clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of accelerated silicosis
Limin HUANG ; Shaowei ZHOU ; Zidan CHEN ; Jin SHI ; Luqin BIAN ; Ling MAO
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2025;43(6):401-409
Objective:To explore the epidemiological characteristics, imaging findings, pulmonary function changes, dust exposure situations, and treatment outcomes of accelerated silicosis through an analysis of existing literature.Methods:In December 2024, relevant literature from January 1, 1965 to December 15, 2024 was retrieved through the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang Database, VIP Database, EMbase, and PubMed databases. Keywords included "rapidly progressive silicosis" "accelerated silicosis" "subacute silicosis""artificial stone" and related terms. By incorporating, analyzing, and retrieving data from literatures, a comprehensive review of the epidemiology, clinical features, treatment options, and prognosis of fast forward silicosis was conducted.Results:A total of 72 literatures were included, including 23 cohort studies, 28 case reports, 3 case-control studies, and 18 cross-sectional studies. The average age of all 1794 patients was 33.67 years, with an average dust exposure duration of 5.58 years. The primary occupations associated with accelerated silicosis were stone processing, mining, and artificial quartz stone manufacturing. Imaging findings predominantly included small nodules, ground-glass opacities, and massive fibrosis. Antifibrotic treatment at the early stage of the disease could clearly delay disease progression. However, dust concentrations in workplaces were significantly above safety limits, with inadequate protective measures.Conclusion:Accelerated silicosis is characterized by its rapid onset, swift progression, and unfavorable prognosis. However, it has not garnered adequate attention in the present context. Reliable standard and guidelines are urgently needed to guide clinical diagnosis and treatment.
2.A systematic review on the clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of accelerated silicosis
Limin HUANG ; Shaowei ZHOU ; Zidan CHEN ; Jin SHI ; Luqin BIAN ; Ling MAO
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2025;43(6):401-409
Objective:To explore the epidemiological characteristics, imaging findings, pulmonary function changes, dust exposure situations, and treatment outcomes of accelerated silicosis through an analysis of existing literature.Methods:In December 2024, relevant literature from January 1, 1965 to December 15, 2024 was retrieved through the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wanfang Database, VIP Database, EMbase, and PubMed databases. Keywords included "rapidly progressive silicosis" "accelerated silicosis" "subacute silicosis""artificial stone" and related terms. By incorporating, analyzing, and retrieving data from literatures, a comprehensive review of the epidemiology, clinical features, treatment options, and prognosis of fast forward silicosis was conducted.Results:A total of 72 literatures were included, including 23 cohort studies, 28 case reports, 3 case-control studies, and 18 cross-sectional studies. The average age of all 1794 patients was 33.67 years, with an average dust exposure duration of 5.58 years. The primary occupations associated with accelerated silicosis were stone processing, mining, and artificial quartz stone manufacturing. Imaging findings predominantly included small nodules, ground-glass opacities, and massive fibrosis. Antifibrotic treatment at the early stage of the disease could clearly delay disease progression. However, dust concentrations in workplaces were significantly above safety limits, with inadequate protective measures.Conclusion:Accelerated silicosis is characterized by its rapid onset, swift progression, and unfavorable prognosis. However, it has not garnered adequate attention in the present context. Reliable standard and guidelines are urgently needed to guide clinical diagnosis and treatment.
3.Comparison of welder's pneumoconiosis with silicosis and follow-up study of welder's pneumoconiosis.
Jin SHI ; Ling MAO ; E-mail: MAOLING113@SINA.COM. ; Zidan CHEN ; Shaowei ZHOU ; Luqin BIAN ; Daoyuan SUN
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2015;33(11):826-829
OBJECTIVETo study the character of welder's pneumoconiosis on CT, pathology, and lung function.
METHODSTo contrast 185 welder's pneumoconiosis and 115 silicosis on CT, pathology, and clinical characters which were diagnosed between Jan 2008 and Dec 2013. Chest X-ray and lung function of 39 welder's pneumoconiosis patients were followed up after diagnosed 4~6 years later.
RESULTSAverage age and working years of welder's pneumoconiosis were 36.7 and 11.5, less than silicosis patients 58.8 and 22.1, respectively (P<0.05). Of all 185 welder's pneumoconiosis 98.4% were of stage I and no stage III, while in silicosis group stage I, stage II and stage III were 56.5%, 22.6% and 20.9%, respectively. The ratio differences between the two groups were statistically significant,P<0.05. 82.7% of welder's pneumoconiosis patients were observed pathologically moderate or above dust deposition in lung tissue while interstitial fibrosis level was just mild (97.6% patients) or no fibrosis (2.4% patients). By contrast, 60.0% silicosis patients pathologically showed moderate or above dust deposition while 77.8% were of moderate or above fibrosis. CT findings in welder' s pneumoconiosis were diffuse branching linear structure (38.9%), low density consistent size centrilobular micronodules (19.5%), or both (30.8%). Poorly-defined ground-glass attenuation centrilobular micronodules or widely ground glass shadow were observed in 6.4% welder's pneumoconiosis patents. 30.8% patients failed to reach the original stage when 39 welder's pneumoconiosis followed up chest radiograph.
CONCLUSIONChanges in welder's lung caused by welding fume were not only siderosis, but also interstitial fibrosis.
Adult ; Dust ; Fibrosis ; Follow-Up Studies ; Glass ; Humans ; Lung ; pathology ; Middle Aged ; Pneumoconiosis ; physiopathology ; Radiography, Thoracic ; Siderosis ; physiopathology ; Silicosis ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Welding

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