[人造矿物纤维的化学和物理特性及毒理学]

[Chemical and physical characteristics and toxicology of man-made mineral fibers].

作者信息

Foà V, Basilico S

机构信息

Dipartimento di Medicina del Lavoro, Università degli Studi di Milano.

出版信息

Med Lav. 1999 Jan-Feb;90(1):10-52.

DOI:
Abstract

The evidence for the adverse health effects following exposure to asbestos (i.e. fibrogenic and carcinogenic effect) has prompted widespread removal of asbestos-containing materials and led to banning of asbestos internationally (in Italy, DPR 257/1992), resulting in the increased use of substitutes composed of both naturally occurring and synthetic materials, including man made mineral fibres (MMMFs) and man made organic fibres (MMOF). MMMFs represent a family of synthetic, inorganic vitreous substances derived primarily from glass, rock, slag, or clay. MMMFs are further divided into two categories: 1) man made vitreous fibres (MMVFs), further divided as follows: a) fibrous glass, including mainly continuous filament, special purpose fibres; and microfibres. The materials are typically composed of oxides of silicon, calcium, sodium, potassium, aluminum, and boron. b) Mineral wool, including glass wool, rock wool (derived from magma rock) and slag wool (made from molten slag produced in metallurgical processes such as the production of iron, steel, or copper). The main components of rock wool and slag wool are oxides of silicon, calcium, magnesium, aluminum, and iron. 2) Refractory/ceramic fibres, amorphous or partially crystalline materials made from kaolin clay or oxides of aluminum, silicon or other metal oxides (i.e. oxides of zirconium and yttrium). Less commonly, refractory fibres are also made from non-oxide refractory materials such as silicon carbide, silicon nitride, or boron nitride. Industrial production of MMVFs began in the second half of the 19th century, while ceramic fibres production began more recently, in the early 1970s. Major uses of MMMFs include thermal, acoustic and aerospace insulation, fire proofing, reinforcing material in plastics, cement and textile, optic fibres, air and liquid filtration, friction products, refractory coatings. Serious questions have been raised about health implications of MMMFs. Suspicion about the possible occurrence of adverse effects following exposure to MMMFs arises mainly from some similarities of MMMFs with asbestos (fibrous aspects, inhalability, chemical composition, free radical formation). The fibre characteristics that have been identified as crucial in influencing the pathogenesis of fibre-related adverse respiratory effects can be mainly divided into two groups: fibre dimension, and chemical composition and structure. Fibre dimension plays a determining role in conditioning penetration in the lung. In a broad sense, the term "respirable" means "capable of being carried by breath into the respiratory system". For regulatory purposes, "respirable fibres" (i.e. RFP) are defined in most countries following WHO criteria: length > 5 microns, diameter < 3 microns, length/diameter > 3. MMMFs are generally produced as fibres of diameter higher than asbestos, and too large in diameter to be respirable. Moreover, due to the production process, they are structurally amorphous. Since MMMFs have no crystalline domains, they also have no clearly defined structural faults and they fracture transversely, and randomly. Fragments that are too large to be taken up by macrophages can be resolved in the lung by a leaching--or dissolution--process which leads to a progressive reduction of particle length. In contrast, when abraded, asbestos tends to split longitudinally into new, fine, straight fibres: these fibrils are of much smaller diameter, more respirable, and consequently more hazardous than parent fibres. Fibre chemical composition plays a determining role in conditioning the higher or lower biological activity, durability, biopersistence, and biodegradability. The term "biological activity" means reactivity or ability to interact (possibly due to formation of active oxygen species, identified as a crucial step in the mechanism of action) with biological structures and tissues. Fibre "durability" is strictly related to its solubility. It can be defined as the ability to resist

摘要

接触石棉后对健康产生不良影响的证据(即致纤维化和致癌作用)促使人们广泛清除含石棉材料,并在国际上导致石棉被禁用(在意大利,总统令257/1992),这使得由天然和合成材料组成的替代品的使用增加,包括人造矿物纤维(MMMFs)和人造有机纤维(MMOF)。MMMFs是一类主要由玻璃、岩石、矿渣或粘土衍生而来的合成无机玻璃质物质。MMMFs进一步分为两类:1)人造玻璃纤维(MMVFs),进一步细分如下:a)玻璃纤维,主要包括连续长丝、特殊用途纤维和微纤维。这些材料通常由硅、钙、钠、钾、铝和硼的氧化物组成。b)矿物棉,包括玻璃棉、岩棉(由岩浆岩衍生而来)和矿渣棉(由冶金过程如铁、钢或铜生产中产生的熔融矿渣制成)。岩棉和矿渣棉的主要成分是硅、钙、镁、铝和铁的氧化物。2)耐火/陶瓷纤维,由高岭土或铝、硅或其他金属氧化物(即锆和钇的氧化物)制成的无定形或部分结晶材料。不太常见的是,耐火纤维也由非氧化物耐火材料如碳化硅、氮化硅或氮化硼制成。MMVFs的工业生产始于19世纪下半叶,而陶瓷纤维的生产则始于更近的20世纪70年代初。MMMFs的主要用途包括热绝缘、隔音和航空航天绝缘、防火、塑料、水泥和纺织品中的增强材料、光纤、空气和液体过滤、摩擦产品、耐火涂层。关于MMMFs对健康的影响已经提出了严重的问题。对接触MMMFs后可能产生不良影响的怀疑主要源于MMMFs与石棉的一些相似之处(纤维方面、可吸入性、化学成分、自由基形成)。已被确定对纤维相关不良呼吸效应发病机制有关键影响的纤维特性主要可分为两组:纤维尺寸以及化学成分和结构。纤维尺寸在决定其在肺部的穿透方面起决定性作用。从广义上讲,“可吸入的”一词意味着“能够通过呼吸携带进入呼吸系统”。出于监管目的,大多数国家根据世界卫生组织的标准定义“可吸入纤维”(即RFP):长度>5微米,直径<3微米,长度/直径>3。MMMFs通常生产出的纤维直径比石棉大,且直径太大而不可吸入。此外,由于生产过程,它们在结构上是无定形的。由于MMMFs没有结晶域,它们也没有明确界定的结构缺陷,并且横向随机断裂。太大而无法被巨噬细胞摄取的碎片可通过浸出或溶解过程在肺部分解,这会导致颗粒长度逐渐减小。相比之下,当磨损时,石棉往往会纵向分裂成新的、细的、直的纤维:这些原纤维的直径要小得多,更易吸入,因此比母纤维更危险。纤维化学成分在决定其生物活性的高低、耐久性、生物持久性和生物降解性方面起决定性作用。“生物活性”一词是指与生物结构和组织相互作用的反应性或能力(可能由于活性氧物种的形成,这被确定为作用机制中的关键步骤)。纤维“耐久性”与其溶解度密切相关。它可以定义为抵抗的能力

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