1979
DOI: 10.1136/oem.36.3.206
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The relationship between coal rank and the prevalence of pneumoconiosis.

Abstract: As part of the Periodic X-ray Scheme of the National Coal Board (NCB), a comparison is made between the previous and new films of all miners who were face-workers on the former occasion, five years earlier. This assessment is made by distributing the films randomly to all the NCB readers. This paper compares the rank of coal mined in each colliery with each colliery's percentage prevalence of pneumoconiosis of at least ILO category 1 in the films of previous faceworkers obtained during the third survey round .… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…As rank increases, the ratio of carbon to other chemicals and mineral contaminants increases. In general, anthracite coal mining has been associated with higher rates of pneumoconiosis than that found in bituminous miners (36,37). Anthracite coal mine dust contains more surface free radicals than bituminous coal, which may explain its higher cytotoxicity and pathogenicity (38)(39)(40).…”
Section: Physical and Chemical Properties Of Coalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As rank increases, the ratio of carbon to other chemicals and mineral contaminants increases. In general, anthracite coal mining has been associated with higher rates of pneumoconiosis than that found in bituminous miners (36,37). Anthracite coal mine dust contains more surface free radicals than bituminous coal, which may explain its higher cytotoxicity and pathogenicity (38)(39)(40).…”
Section: Physical and Chemical Properties Of Coalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, there seems to be a relationship between rank of coal (that is, an index of combustibility related approximately to carbon content) and risk of disease-high-rank, high-carbon coals being most dangerous.8 9 This fits well with the observed high prevalence of disease in South Wales and also with the pattern in the United States. Men exposed in the past to high-rank coals in Britain, however, have also traditionally been exposed to very high dust levels, and high-rank coal is rather non-toxic when examined in vitro.…”
mentioning
confidence: 62%
“…High exposure to clay minerals (kaolin and mica) apparently antagonized the hazard from increasing quartz exposure, and the existence of a factor or factors varying between collieries but not reflected in the available environmental data was postulated (3). A well-marked connection was demonstrated between a radiological category of at least 1/0 and rank of coal mined; there was a fivefold increase of prevalence in miners who worked in high rank collieries compared to those who worked in low rank collieries (11). However, large differences in prevalence were also found between separate areas in the coal field of equal rank, suggesting that factors other than rank, such as dust concentration, were involved.…”
Section: Rank Of Coalmentioning
confidence: 87%