Application of ILO classification to a population without industrial exposure: findings to be differentiated from pneumoconiosis
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Roentgen Ray Society in American Journal of Roentgenology
- Vol. 142 (1) , 53-58
- https://doi.org/10.2214/ajr.142.1.53
Abstract
The International Labour Office (ILO) classification of radiographs of pneumoconiosis is a standard means of assessing the presence or absence of pneumoconiosis in workers exposed to mineral dusts. Using this classification, 200 admission chest radiographs were reviewed on hospitalized patients in an urban university medical center to determine the prevalence and possible significance of "small opacities" in a population without known industrial exposure. Seventy-one men and 129 women were screened with the mean age of 44.2 years (range, 15-84). Thirty-six (18%) of the 200 patients had small opacities at profusion level 1/0 or greater, and this constituted the "positive radiographs" group. Twenty-two patients (11%) with positive radiographs had no documentable dust exposure or other specific medical etiology that would explain the presence of their lung opacities. The high prevalence of small opacities in "normal" older individuals has important implications in the assessment of patients with suspected pn...This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- PLEURAL THICKENING - ITS SIGNIFICANCE AND RELATIONSHIP TO ASBESTOS DUST EXPOSUREPublished by Elsevier ,1982
- Respiratory disability in coal minersJAMA, 1980
- Normal Chest Roentgenograms in Chronic Diffuse Infiltrative Lung DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- PNEUMOCONIOSES AND THEIR MASQUERADERS1977