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Veterinary World Mar 2024Kathmandu is a densely populated metropolitan city in Nepal. In recent years, however, the metropolis has been ranked as one of the most polluted cities worldwide. Both...
BACKGROUND AND AIM
Kathmandu is a densely populated metropolitan city in Nepal. In recent years, however, the metropolis has been ranked as one of the most polluted cities worldwide. Both humans and animals are susceptible to various respiratory diseases due to chronic exposure to polluted air. Due to the relative similarities in the anatomical structure and physiological functions of the respiratory system between humans and dogs, polluted environments may lead to respiratory illness in similar ways in both species living in the valley. On the basis of information on the air quality in the valley, this study was conceived to assess pulmonary illness in street dogs to discern the health hazards caused by polluted air.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A total of 76 dogs with clinical signs of tachypnea, dyspnea, sneezing, coughing, mucopurulent discharge, moderate hyperthermia, and anorexia admitted from July 2020 to November 2020 in Animal Nepal for treatment were included in this study. Among them, 24 animals responded to treatment, and 52 dogs died during their stay in the hospital. The 52 dead animals were necropsied, and the lesions that resembled pulmonary anthracosis were further studied grossly and histologically in a blinded fashion by trained veterinary pathologists.
RESULTS
Significant morphological alterations were observed in the lungs and associated lymph nodes of 25 animals, indicating pulmonary anthracosis. Gross morphological changes included multiple black foci with hemorrhage, congestion, nodular, and emphysema on the parietal and visceral surfaces of the lungs. The alveolar septa and visceral pleura exhibited deposition of black particles. Congestion, emphysema, and inflammatory exudates were also detected in the lung tissues and lymph nodes.
CONCLUSION
The clinical, gross, and microscopic findings accurately resembled those of pulmonary anthracosis. This life-threatening condition in stray canines may be caused by a critical level of air pollution from different sources and carbon emissions from vehicles. To protect animals and humans living in the Kathmandu Valley, concerned government and non-government agencies should work toward reducing air pollution levels as soon as possible.
PubMed: 38680155
DOI: 10.14202/vetworld.2024.658-665 -
Journal of Ayub Medical College,... 2023Anthracosis is a type of mild pneumoconiosis secondary to harmless carbon dust deposits. Although anthracosis was previously associated with inhaled coal particles, such...
Anthracosis is a type of mild pneumoconiosis secondary to harmless carbon dust deposits. Although anthracosis was previously associated with inhaled coal particles, such as coal workers' pneumoconiosis, this hypothesis was later abandoned; pathology has been associated with inhaled dust particles. Our paper is the first case report of ANCA-associated vasculitis and anthracosis coexistence. In addition, it aims to highlight that histopathologically proven anthracotic granulomatous nodules can show high FDG uptake in PET/CT contrary to expectation. We present a case of a 73-year-old male with p-ANCA-associated vasculitis and anthracotic lung nodules accompanied by radiological and clinical findings. The patient got diagnosis with p-ANCA-associated vasculitis with serological and rheumatological tests. Atypically, the clinical findings of the patient were weak (No dyspnoea, cough or additional pulmonary complaints). Nodules were present on X-ray graphics and nodules' contours were irregular on CT. On PET/CT, SUV values of the nodules were high [12 kBq/mL]. Histopathological specimens showed multiple lung granulomas including anthracosis particles. Until performing the biopsy, we could not exclude the possibility of malignancy. Conclusion: When lung involvement of vasculitis is superimposed by anthracosis, it can create granulomas with high SUV values. The relationship between anthracosis and parenchymal lung diseases is a current topic and many recently published papers are present on this subject. To the best of our knowledge, our paper is the first paper showing the relationship between parenchymal involvement of vasculitis and anthracosis in the literature. Environmental pollution and dust particles are the known reasons for anthracosis particles in the nodules. It is open to future research on whether air pollution triggers new atypical cases or not.
Topics: Male; Humans; Aged; Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography; Anthracosis; Pneumoconiosis; Dust; Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated Vasculitis; Coal; Granuloma
PubMed: 38404098
DOI: 10.55519/JAMC-03-11529 -
Medicine Feb 2024Coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP) is one of the most common and severe occupational diseases worldwide. The main risk factor of CWP is exposure to respirable mine dust....
Coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP) is one of the most common and severe occupational diseases worldwide. The main risk factor of CWP is exposure to respirable mine dust. Prediction theory was widely applied in the prediction of the epidemic. Here, it was used to identify the characteristics of CWP today and the incidence trends of CWP in the future. Eight thousand nine hundred twenty-eight coal workers from a state-owned coal mine were included during the observation period from 1963 to 2014. In observations, the dust concentration gradually decreased over time, and the incidence of tunnels and mine, transportation, and assistance workers showed an overall downward trend. We choose a better prediction model by comparing the prediction effect of the Auto Regression Integrate Moving Average model and Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity model. Compared with the Auto Regression Integrate Moving Average model, the Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity model has a better prediction effect. Furthermore, the status quo and future trend of coal miners' CWP are still at a high level.
Topics: Humans; Coal Mining; Anthracosis; Dust; Coal; China; Pneumoconiosis
PubMed: 38363918
DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000037237 -
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety Feb 2024Coal worker's pneumoconiosis (CWP) is a common occupational disease that coal miners are highly susceptible due to long-term exposure to coal dust particles (CDP). CWP...
Coal worker's pneumoconiosis (CWP) is a common occupational disease that coal miners are highly susceptible due to long-term exposure to coal dust particles (CDP). CWP can induce the accumulation of immune cells surrounding the bronchioles and alveoli in the lungs, resulting in pulmonary fibrosis and compromised immune function. Using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq), our previous studies disclose that CDP exposure triggers heterogeneity of transcriptional profiles in mouse pneumoconiosis, while Vitamin D3 (VitD3) supplementation reduces CDP-induced cytotoxicity; however, the mechanism by which how VitD3 regulates immune status in coal pneumoconiosis remains unclear. In this study, we elucidated the heterogeneity of pulmonary lymphocytes in mice exposed to CDP and demonstrated the therapeutic efficacy of VitD3 using scRNA-Seq dataset. The validation of key lymphocyte markers and their functional molecules was performed using immunofluorescence. The results demonstrated that VitD3 increased the number of naive T cells by modulating CD4 + T cell differentiation and decreased the number of Treg cells in CDP-exposed mice, thereby enhancing the cytotoxic activity of CD8 + effector T cells. These effects markedly alleviated lung fibrosis and symptoms. Taken together, the mechanism by which VitD3 regulates the functions of lymphocytes in CWP provides a new perspective for further research on the prevention and treatment of CWP.
Topics: Animals; Mice; Coal Mining; Pneumoconiosis; Anthracosis; Pulmonary Fibrosis; Coal; Immune Tolerance
PubMed: 38218105
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2024.115972 -
Clinical Pathology (Thousand Oaks,... 2023Peribronchiolar metaplasia (PBM) is considered a reaction to injury characterized by the proliferation of bronchiolar epithelium into immediately adjacent alveolar...
BACKGROUND
Peribronchiolar metaplasia (PBM) is considered a reaction to injury characterized by the proliferation of bronchiolar epithelium into immediately adjacent alveolar walls. While an association of PBM with diffuse interstitial lung diseases has been recognized, the clinical significance of PBM remains uncertain.
METHODS
A cohort (n = 352) undergoing surgical resection of a lung nodule/mass in a rural area was retrospectively reviewed. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to determine the association of PBM with clinical, physiological, radiographic, and histologic endpoints.
RESULTS
In the total study cohort, 9.1% were observed to have PBM as a histologic finding in resected lung tissue (n = 32). All but one of these patients with PBM were ever-smokers with a median of 42 pack years. Clinical COPD was diagnosed in two-thirds of patients with PBM. Comorbid gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) was significantly associated with PBM. All patients with PBM demonstrated radiologic and histologic evidence of emphysema. Measures of pulmonary function were not impacted by PBM. Mortality was not associated with the histologic observation of PBM. In a logistic regression model, centrilobular-ground glass opacity interstitial lung abnormality and traction bronchiectasis on the CT scan of the chest and histologic evidence of fibrosis, desquamative interstitial pneumonia and anthracosis all strongly predicted PBM in the cohort.
CONCLUSION
A constellation of radiologic and histologic smoking-related abnormalities predicted PBM in study cohort. This confirms a co-existence of lung tissue responses to smoking including PBM, emphysema, and fibrosis. Acknowledging the physiologically "silent" nature of small airway dysfunction on pulmonary function testing, our findings support PBM as a histologic marker of small-airway injury associated with cigarette smoking.
PubMed: 37954231
DOI: 10.1177/2632010X231209878 -
Annals of the American Thoracic Society Apr 2024Indigenous populations in the United States face numerous health disparities, but the health of Indigenous workers is less well understood. In a recent surveillance...
Indigenous populations in the United States face numerous health disparities, but the health of Indigenous workers is less well understood. In a recent surveillance study of active Indigenous coal miners, 3% had coal workers' pneumoconiosis/black lung, and 9% had respiratory impairment. However, occupational lung disease prevalence among Indigenous coal miners has not been directly compared with that among other race/ethnicity groups. Coal miners who are totally disabled from black lung may qualify for U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) compensation benefits, but it is unclear how current federal spirometry criteria affect qualification for Indigenous coal miners. To compare findings of pneumoconiosis and respiratory impairment in Indigenous and non-Indigenous coal miners in the western United States and assess federal compensation qualification for Indigenous miners using different spirometry standards. We used voluntary medical surveillance data from 2002 to 2023 to compare the adjusted odds of pneumoconiosis and respiratory impairment between Indigenous/non-Indigenous coal miners. We examined the proportion of Indigenous miners meeting DOL criteria for federal compensation using different spirometry standards. We identified 691 western U.S. coal miners with at least one year of coal mining employment, 289 Indigenous and 402 non-Indigenous (96% White/Hispanic). Indigenous miners had a greater odds ratio for pneumoconiosis for each additional decade of life (2.47 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.66-3.68]) compared with non-Indigenous coal miners (1.48 [95% CI, 1.19-1.85]). For each decade, Indigenous coal miners also had a greater adjusted odds ratio for respiratory impairment (1.67 [95% CI, 1.25-2.24]) than non-Indigenous miners (1.06 [95% CI, 0.90-1.25]). Indigenous miners had an additional decline of 71 ml (95% CI, 6-136 ml) in forced expiratory volume in 1 second for each decade of life compared with non-Indigenous coal miners. Using the DOL-mandated Knudson (1976) spirometry standard rather than an Indigenous-specific standard, 6 of 18 (33%) Indigenous miners would not qualify for federal compensation. Indigenous coal miners experience greater adjusted odds for pneumoconiosis and respiratory impairment per decade of life and greater decline in forced expiratory volume in 1 second despite lower smoking rates. Structural inequities exist in federal spirometry requirements for Indigenous miners seeking DOL black lung benefits. Regulatory reform is needed to address barriers to compensation for these underrepresented workers.
Topics: United States; Humans; Race Factors; Pneumoconiosis; Coal Mining; Anthracosis; Respiratory Insufficiency; Coal
PubMed: 37916934
DOI: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.202305-496OC -
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery Aug 2023Although thoracic surgeons occasionally encounter dense adhesions of interlobar lymph node anthracosilicosis with the pulmonary artery, adhesiolysis may be challenging....
BACKGROUND
Although thoracic surgeons occasionally encounter dense adhesions of interlobar lymph node anthracosilicosis with the pulmonary artery, adhesiolysis may be challenging. Besides, characteristic microscopic features of the adherent lesion remain limited.
CASE PRESENTATION
During a thoracoscopic right upper lobectomy of a patient with stage IA3 primary lung adenocarcinoma, several interlobar lymph nodes adhered to the posterior ascending branch of the pulmonary artery to the right upper lobe were noted. After an unplanned conversion to a thoracotomy to avoid massive bleeding, the pulmonary artery branch was safely isolated. Microscopic examination revealed lymph node anthracosilicosis proximal to the peripheral pulmonary artery wall, with granulomatous inflammation. The adventitial stroma of the pulmonary artery developed into dense and borderless fibrous tissue with dust-laden macrophages.
CONCLUSIONS
Our pathological findings on lymph node anthracosilicosis provide substantial evidence that adhesions between lymph nodes and the pulmonary artery walls may develop into dense and borderless fibrous tissue. This finding would remind thoracic surgeons that adhesiolysis could cause injury to the pulmonary artery.
Topics: Humans; Pulmonary Artery; Anthracosilicosis; Tissue Adhesions; Lymph Nodes; Lung Neoplasms
PubMed: 37605209
DOI: 10.1186/s13019-023-02348-5 -
Cancers Jul 2023ICG fluorescence imaging has been used to detect lung cancer; however, there is no consensus regarding the optimization of the indocyanine green (ICG) injection method....
ICG fluorescence imaging has been used to detect lung cancer; however, there is no consensus regarding the optimization of the indocyanine green (ICG) injection method. The aim of this study was to determine the optimal dose and timing of ICG for lung cancer detection using animal models and to evaluate the feasibility of ICG fluorescence in lung cancer patients. In a preclinical study, twenty C57BL/6 mice with footpad cancer and thirty-three rabbits with VX2 lung cancer were used. These animals received an intravenous injection of ICG at 0.5, 1, 2, or 5 mg/kg, and the cancers were detected using a fluorescent imaging system after 3, 6, 12, and 24 h. In a clinical study, fifty-one patients diagnosed with lung cancer and scheduled to undergo surgery were included. Fluorescent images of lung cancer were obtained, and the fluorescent signal was quantified. Based on a preclinical study, the optimal injection method for lung cancer detection was 2 mg/kg ICG 12 h before surgery. Among the 51 patients, ICG successfully detected 37 of 39 cases with a consolidation-to-tumor (C/T) ratio of >50% (TNR: 3.3 ± 1.2), while it failed in 12 cases with a C/T ratio ≤ 50% and 2 cases with anthracosis. ICG injection at 2 mg/kg, 12 h before surgery was optimal for lung cancer detection. Lung cancers with the C/T ratio > 50% were successfully detected using ICG with a detection rate of 95%, but not with the C/T ratio ≤ 50%. Therefore, further research is needed to develop fluorescent agents targeting lung cancer.
PubMed: 37509304
DOI: 10.3390/cancers15143643 -
Thoracic Research and Practice Jul 2023A rare case of a patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease who developed secondary anthracofibrosis to biomass exposure, fibrosing mediastinitis due to...
A rare case of a patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease who developed secondary anthracofibrosis to biomass exposure, fibrosing mediastinitis due to anthracotic enlarged lymph nodes in the mediastinum, and pulmonary hypertension because of compres- sion of the lymph nodes on the pulmonary arteries is presented. This is a case report of a 71-year-old female patient who has been followed up with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for 10 years, has no history of smoking, and has been exposed to biomass for many years. The patient, who had been hospitalized in various centers for the last 3 years due to progressive shortness of breath and dry cough, applied to us with dry cough and dyspnea complaints. On echocardiography, systolic pulmonary arterial pressure was found to be 59 mmHg. For the etiology of pulmonary hypertension, dual-energy thoracic computed tomography was performed with the suspicion of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. No filling defect compatible with thromboembolism was detected. In right heart catheterization, mean pulmonary artery pressure was 27 mmHg, pulmonary capillary tip pressure was 7 mmHg, and pulmonary vascular resistance was 3.71 woods units. Endobronchial ultrasound was applied to the patient with the preliminary diagnoses of lymphoma, anthracosis, fibrosing mediastinitis, and infection. Widespread anthracosis was observed in all lobes and segments macroscopically. The lymph node in the subcarinal area was interpreted as anthracotic lymph node. Anthracosis is defined as black pigmentation involving the mucosal, and submucosal layers of the tracheobronchial tree and the lung parenchyma. If anthracosis is associated with luminal obliteration and/or mucosal proliferation causing obstruction, it is considered anthracofibrosis. In this case, we saw that secondary anthracofibrosis, fibrosing mediastinitis due to anthracotic enlarged lymph nodes in the mediastinum, and pulmonary hypertension may develop because of compression of the lymph nodes on the pulmonary arteries, and we wanted to draw attention to it was a rare case.
PubMed: 37485714
DOI: 10.5152/ThoracResPract.2023.22110 -
Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences Apr 2023Locoregional recurrence in lung cancer still remains an important problem. We aimed to indicate the effectiveness of endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial...
BACKGROUND
Locoregional recurrence in lung cancer still remains an important problem. We aimed to indicate the effectiveness of endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) for reevaluation in previously treated nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
METHODS
: NSCLC patients who underwent EBUS for rebiopsy of suspicious recurrent or progressive lesions between January 2010 and June 2017 were reviewed. Patients were categorized into two groups based on the previous treatment modalities: Group 1 (G1) consisted of patients who had been treated with chemoradiotherapy, and Group 2 (G2) consisted of patients who had undergone radical surgery.
RESULTS
Of 115 patients, 100 patients enrolled in the study. Of 26 patients with 35 lymph nodes in G1, malignant cells were identified in thirteen patients (50%). Anthracosis was detected in the remaining. Malignancy was detected in 28 patients (37.8%) in G2. Thirty-threepatients were diagnosed as benign (24 anthracosis; 8 lymphocytes, and 1 granulomatous); 8 were not sampled, and inadequate material was obtained in five. The sensitivity, specificity, negative and positive predictive value, and overall diagnostic accuracy of EBUS-TBNA for rebiopsy in G1 were 84.8%, 100%, 89.1%, 100%, and 93.2%, respectively. These values were all perfect in G2.
DISCUSSION
EBUS-TBNA could be preferred as a feasible and efficient procedure for rebiopsy in previously treated NSCLC patients.
Topics: Humans; Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung; Lung Neoplasms; Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Fine Needle Aspiration; Predictive Value of Tests; Lymph Nodes; Anthracosis; Retrospective Studies; Neoplasm Staging; Bronchoscopy
PubMed: 37476873
DOI: 10.55730/1300-0144.5619