Giving your home a clean bill of health
What are the health effects of asbestos exposure?
Exposure to airborne friable asbestos may result in a potential health
risk because persons breathing the air may breathe in asbestos fibers. Continued exposure can increase the amount of fibers that remain
in the lung. Fibers embedded in lung tissue over time may cause serious lung diseases including: asbestosis, lung cancer, or mesothelioma.
- Asbestosis
– Asbestosis is a serious, progressive, long-term non-cancer disease of the lungs. It is caused by inhaling asbestos fibers that irritate
lung tissues and cause the tissues to scar. The scarring makes it hard for oxygen to get into the blood. Symptoms of asbestosis include
shortness of breath and a dry, crackling sound in the lungs while inhaling. There is no effective treatment for asbestosis.
- Lung Cancer
– Lung cancer causes the largest number of deaths related to asbestos exposure. People who work in the mining, milling, manufacturing
of asbestos, and those who use asbestos and its products are more likely to develop lung cancer than the general population. The most
common symptoms of lung cancer are coughing and a change in breathing. Other symptoms include shortness of breath, persistent chest
pains, hoarseness, and anemia. People who have been exposed to asbestos and also are exposed to some other cancer-causing product,
such as cigarette smoke, have a greater risk of developing lung cancer than people who have only been exposed to asbestos.
- Mesothelioma
– Mesothelioma is a rare form of cancer that is found in the thin lining (membrane) of the lung, chest, abdomen, and heart and almost
all cases are linked to exposure to asbestos. This disease may not show up until many years after asbestos exposure. This is why great
efforts are being made to prevent school children from being exposed