The long term fibrogenic effects of chrysotile and crocidolite asbestos dust injected into the pleural cavity of experimental animals.
- 1 December 1970
- journal article
- Vol. 51 (6) , 617-27
Abstract
In a series of experiments on the effects of chrysotile and crocidolite asbestos dust injected into the pleural cavities of experimental animals, the following results were obtained. Both dusts produced large granulomas in all the species used, but the histological patterns of these lesions varied. In guinea-pigs both chrysotile and crocidolite produced granulomas that consisted mainly of giant cells, mixed with a few macrophages and fibroblasts, and each granuloma was surrounded by a distinct capsule of fibrous tissue. In mice and rats, however, relatively few giant cells were present in the asbestos granulomas, and the lesions consisted only of macrophages with some fibroblasts. In these 2 species the granulomas were not surrounded by a distinct capsule. In all cases the granulomas were eventually replaced by masses of fibrous tissue, but the time sequence of this change was variable. In guinea-pigs the granulomas remained cellular for 6-12 months, and after this period there was evidence of the invasion of the lesions by fresh macrophages which rephagocytosed dust left behind by the death of previous cells. In mice some areas of the granulomas remained cellular for 12-15 months, but others were completely fibrosed by 6-9 months. In rats fibrosis of the asbestos granulomas was very rapid, and most lesions consisted of old almost acellular collagen by 3-4 months. In all species a few animals showed massive pleural fibrosis outside the main granulomas. In some cases this appeared to be associated with an infection spreading from the lung tissue, but in others no such association could be traced.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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