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AbstractAbstract
[en] Underground workers are exposed to various clastogenic agents. One of these agents, radon, attracts attention of recent research as it causes lung cancer in the population occupationally exposed to its various concentrations especially in mine air of uranium mines or ore mines. This paper is a pilot study in which the numbers of chromosomal aberrations (CA) in lymphocytes of ore mines (Nizna Slana-iron ore, Hnusta-talc ore) located in east central Slovakia were followed and related to the lifetime underground radon exposure and to lifetime smoking. Seventy miners volunteering after an informed consent served as donors of venous blood. Twenty healthy pro-bands, age matched with the miners, which never worked underground (mostly clerks) served as donors of control blood samples. The exposure to radon and smoking has been estimated according to working-records and personal anamnesis. The findings unequivocally showed a small but statistically significant clastogenic effect of the exposure to underground environment of the mines concerned. This study has shown also a small but significant influence of smoking, which in the subgroup of miners working underground less than 1500 shifts may have acted synergically with the underground exposure. It was concluded tat: (1) Significantly higher counts of chromosomal aberrations in lymphocytes of 70 miners than in an age matched control group of 20 white-collar workers were found; (2) The higher counts of chromosomal aberrations could be ascribed to underground exposure of miners and to smoking; (3) The positive dependence of the number of chromosomal aberrations from the exposure to smoking was loose and it was expressed by significantly higher chromosomal aberrations counts in the group of miners working less than 1500 shifts underground; (4) A dependence of chromosomal aberrations counts from the exposure to radon could not be assessed. At relatively low numbers of pro-bands in subgroups it was not ruled out the confounding of such dependence by smoking which in this study showed to be a risk could not be neglected
Primary Subject
Source
Uranpress Ltd., Spisska Nova Ves (Slovak Republic); C and S Radon Ltd., Spisska Nova Ves (Slovak Republic); Geocomplex j.s.c., Bratislava (Slovak Republic); Institute of Preventive and Clinical Medicine, Bratislava (Slovak Republic); Slovak Geological Society; Slovak Miner Society; Society of Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Hygieny of the Slovak Medicine Society; 104 p; 1997; p. 46-48; RENVI '97: 1. Conference on Radioactivity in the Environment; Spisska Nova Ves (Slovak Republic); 21-22 Oct 1997; 2 figs., 2 tabs., 14 refs.
Record Type
Miscellaneous
Literature Type
Conference; Numerical Data
Report Number
Country of publication
BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS, CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, DELAYED RADIATION EFFECTS, ENVIRONMENT, EXPERIMENTAL DATA, GENETIC CONTROL, INTERNAL IRRADIATION, MINERS, MUTAGENESIS, NATURAL RADIOACTIVITY, RADIATION PROTECTION, RADIOECOLOGY, RADIONUCLIDE KINETICS, RADIONUCLIDE MIGRATION, RADON 222, SLOVAKIA, SYNERGISM, TOBACCO SMOKES
AEROSOLS, ALPHA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS, BIOLOGICAL RADIATION EFFECTS, COLLOIDS, DATA, DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES, DISPERSIONS, EASTERN EUROPE, ECOLOGY, ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSPORT, EUROPE, EVEN-EVEN NUCLEI, HEAVY NUCLEI, INFORMATION, IRRADIATION, ISOTOPES, KINETICS, MASS TRANSFER, MUTATIONS, NUCLEI, NUMERICAL DATA, PERSONNEL, PEST CONTROL, RADIATION EFFECTS, RADIOACTIVITY, RADIOISOTOPES, RADON ISOTOPES, RESIDUES, SMOKES, SOLS
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