Guest guest Posted November 17, 2003 Report Share Posted November 17, 2003 http://pubs.acs.org//journals/esthag-w/2003/nov/science/rr_asbestos.htm\ l Science News - November 13, 2003 Asbestos investigation under way After years of local controversy over the health risks from naturally occurring tremolite asbestos (Environ. Sci. Technol. 1999, 33, 348A–349A), a federal agency on October 20 began an investigation in one of the fastest growing regions of California. Some researchers believe that the study might reveal a major public health problem. The U.S. Agency for Toxic Substance Disease Registry (ATSDR) comes to El Dorado, a suburb of Sacramento, with experience investigating the effects of tremolite exposure in Libby, Mont. In Libby, tremolite asbestos occurs as a contaminant in vermiculite that was mined primarily for use as insulation. Asbestos exposure in the small town of about 12,000 has led to 192 deaths and has sickened hundreds of others, according to a 2001 story by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Tremolite asbestos has long been known to promote mesothelioma, a rare cancer of the lining of the lung. A U.S. EPA expert panel in February 2003 unanimously agreed that the carcinogenic potency of tremolite fibers is 2 orders of magnitude greater than for chrysotile fibers. EPA is currently reevaluating its 1986 assessment of asbestos toxicity, which considers all asbestos fibers to be equally hazardous. The ATSDR health evaluation will use this assumption. Some asbestos health experts familiar with both places believe that El Dorado County, whose population is projected to grow to more than 200,000 in the next 10 years, has the makings of a much bigger tragedy. “Thirty years from now, everybody will forget Libby—but El Dorado will be one of the greatest public health disasters of the 21st century in the United States” if development continues unchecked, says pathologist and epidemiologist Bruce Case at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. El Dorado’s population is 10 times that of Libby, and tremolite asbestos is widespread near the surface. Activities that stir up the soil can lead to exposure. In Libby, exposure came from vermiculite mining operations, which lofted tremolite into the air. Miners are also thought to have brought tremolite into their homes on their clothes. Pathologist Jerrold Abraham at the State University of New York’s Upstate Medical University recently found extremely high concentrations of asbestos fibers in the lungs of a dog that had lived in El Dorado for more than 13 years. The data are slim, but they indicate that it is likely that substantial human exposures in this area have already occurred, he says. Since it takes decades for mesothelioma to develop, such lung data may be one of the few ways to predict the future. New studies of Libby residents show that exposure to tremolite asbestos also causes a range of respiratory illnesses, says EPA scientist Christopher Weis, who collaborated on a 2000-2001 clinical study in which about 6800 Libby residents had chest X-rays. About 18% of the population had scarred lungs, including about 40% of men over 65 (Environ. Health Persp. 2003, 111, 1753–1759). “Nothing like this has ever been recorded before,” says Weis. “The results really rocked us; we were completely surprised.” The California Air Resources Board (CARB) has been monitoring the air in the El Dorado region since 1998. However, CARB has mainly conducted ambient air monitoring above the human breathing zone and not disturbed the soil, so the organization’s data may not be relevant, says ATSDR’s regional representative Libby Levy. Recent experiences with amphibole asbestos in Libby and in the World Trade Center cleanup have demonstrated the need for aggressive sampling to get an accurate reflection of exposure, says Arnold Den, senior science adviser for EPA’s Region 9. An aggressive sampling campaign requires stirring up the ground and sampling at the breathing zone level. For example, when technicians used a tractor rake to drag the baseball infield and the dirt track surrounding the football field of the local Oak Ridge High School in July, some results exceeded worker safety exposure limits. In August, the school’s football stadium and baseball diamond were closed, and they have yet to be reopened. Scientists interviewed for this story and many citizens worry that local authorities fail to realize the magnitude of the problem and that federal authorities can’t act because they believe they don’t have jurisdiction over a naturally occurring problem. No one wants a repeat of what happened in Libby. A May 2003 General Accounting Office report criticized EPA for underestimating the extent of contamination in Libby when citizens first complained in 1982. EPA only began an extensive investigation and cleanup after media reports called attention to the health disaster, according to the report. —REBECCA RENNER 2003 American Chemical Society NEW WEB MESSAGE BOARDS - JOIN HERE. Alternative Medicine Message Boards.Info http://alternative-medicine-message-boards.info Protect your identity with Mail AddressGuard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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