VIII.iii.7.A.2.b. General Effects of Asbestos Exposure
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Asbestos fiber masses have a tendency to break easily into tiny dust particles that can float in the air, stick to clothes, and may be inhaled or swallowed.
Inhalation of asbestos fibers can produce
- fibrosis, the most commonly occurring of which is interstitial pulmonary fibrosis, or asbestosis
- tumors
- pleural effusions and fibrosis
- pleural plaques (scars of the lining that surrounds the lungs)
- mesotheliomas of pleura and peritoneum, and
- cancers of the
- lung
- bronchus
- gastrointestinal tract
- larynx
- pharynx, and
- urogenital system, except the prostate.
Note: The biological actions of the various fibers differ in some respects, in that
- chrysotile products
- have their initial effects on the small airways of the lung
- cause asbestosis more slowly, and
- result in lung cancer more often, and
- crocidolite and amosite
- have more initial effects on the small blood vessels of the lung, alveolar walls, and pleura, and
- result more often in mesothelioma.
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