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A COMPARISON OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SPECIFIC NODULE OF SILICOSIS AND OF TUBERCULOSIS
WILLIS S. LEMON, M.D.;
WILLIAM H. FELDMAN, D.V.M., M.S.
Arch Intern Med. 1934;53(3):367-378.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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The earliest historians dealing with mining and the hazards of the industry as they affected the health of the miner have recognized a relationship between the various types of dust and the production of disease. They knew of corrosive and noncorrosive types of dust, both of which produced disability, the former causing such serious injury to the lung that death ensued. Because the sickness resembled what is now called tuberculosis, the term "dust phthisis" came into use. Many patients suffering from dust phthisis became emaciated, coughed productively, had fever and died. It has been reported that in the sixteenth century in the mining communities of the Carpathian Mountains many women could be found who had been widowed time after time by miner's phthisis. The exact relationship between the corrosive and noncorrosive dusts was slow in being established. Finally, however, in the early part of the nineteenth century, Alison, professor of
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
Associate Professor of Medicine, Mayo Foundation; Assistant Professor of Comparative Pathology, Mayo Foundation; ROCHESTER, MINN.
From the Division of Medicine, the Mayo Clinic, and the Institute of Experimental Medicine, the Mayo Clinic.
Footnotes
Read before the meeting of the Association of American Physicians, Washington, D. C., May 11, 1933.
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