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Archive for June, 2010

Companies knew asbestos was dangerous in the 1930s

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

In 1933, the Johns-Manville Company settled with an attorney on behalf of 11 former Manville employees, all asbestosis victims. The attorney received $30,000 for the victims, in exchange for a written promise that he would not “directly or indirectly participate in the bringing of new actions against the Corporation.”

This fact did not come to light for more than 45 years. In the meantime, the company was able successfully to avoid damage suits. Had the public known about this settlement, it is likely that the hazards of asbestos would have come to light decades earlier.

Companies like Alcoa that used asbestos in its daily manufacturing processes have denied knowing that asbestos exposure could be a danger to those who worked closely with the mineral. In fact, these companies have managed to set the late-1960s as the benchmark for when they could have known about the dangers of asbestos — nearly 40 years later!

Asbestos has been linked to mesothelioma, an aggressive and deadly form of cancer. It is difficult to diagnose and symptoms often take 20-30 years to manifest. Usually, by the time symptoms show up, it is too late to save the patient.

Major new study of Libby asbestos contamination begins

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

If you attended  Montana’s Libby High School between 1950 and 1999, and then moved away,  asbestos researchers are looking for you.

Researchers are asking these people to submit to tests to help determine the extent of contamination caused by asbestos mining and processing in the northwestern Montana town. Libby has emerged as the deadliest Superfund site in the nation.

The study by the Center for Asbestos Related Disease will focus on low-level childhood asbestos exposure, compare exposure of Libby asbestos to that of more common commercial forms, and examine the presence of autoimmune disorders like lupus.

Other potential disorders include asbestosis and mesothelioma.

New mesothelioma treatment shows promise

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Rosetta Genomics, Ltd and the NYU Langone Medical Center recently published a joint study called the “Pro-tumorigenic Effects of miR-31 Loss in Mesothelioma” that suggests that the use of miR-31 might be a viable therapeutic treatment to suppress tumors in mesothelioma patients.

In the study, mesothelioma patients were found to lack miR-31, a microRNA recently found to suppress breast cancer metastases. Introduction of miR-31 to the mesothelioma patients in the study suppressed growth, migration and invasion of cancerous cells.

In the future, therapies involving miR-31 and other microRNAs may add years to the life of cancer patients by slowing the advance of the cancerous cells without damaging healthy tissues. It is important to note that there is often a long wait between scientific studies and marketable therapies approved by the Federal Food and Drug Administration for use on patients.

Mesothelioma is an aggressive cancer that affects the lining of the thoracic cavity. It is linked to occupational asbestos exposure.

Texas suffers second fatal gas explosion in as many days

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

A natural gas pipeline exploded about 50 miles south of Fort Worth in Cleburne on Monday, killing one and injuring several others. One man was found dead after the blast, and eight people were taken to local hospitals according to Bob Alford, the county sheriff. The man killed had been riding a truck drilling holes for utility poles when the line suddenly exploded. Other workers lost sight of him in the smoke, and hoped that he had driven himself to a hospital, as several of the others had done.

The AP reports that those injured are employees for a subcontractor hired by Waco-based Brazos Electric Cooperative and were replacing power-lines poles when they hit the pipeline. Authorities are trying to determine if the gas line had been marked before digging started.

As natural gas operations have expanded in Texas, Louisiana, and Pennsylvania, risks associated with the drilling have increased significantly. State regulators in these states have linked drilling to several cases of drinking-water contamination, and authorities in Texas have raised concerns about air emissions from facilities, reports the Wall Street Journal. Federal statistics show that there were 47 pipeline incidents last year that caused death or serious injury across the nation, up from 40 in 2008. The majority of these incidents involved the small gas distribution lines which carry the gas to homes and businesses.

Second Texas gas pipeline blast kills two
The Associated Press has reported that two more workers were killed in Texas as a result of a natural gas line explosion; just one day after another explosion in Cleburne killed one and injured others. The second blast, just outside Darrouzett which is in northeast corner of the Texas Panhandle, involved a crew that was removing caliche (a material used in cement) for a dirt-contracting company.

Two men were killed and three others injured when a bulldozer struck a pipeline. The blast occurred just miles from the border, and one of the injured men was taken by helicopter to a Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma.