Asbestos And Cancer

asbestos and cancer
How does asbestos cause lung cancer?

Please make the terms simple. I need it for my report and I don’t want to say anything that I don’t understand. It’s for high school biology.

The carcinogenic nature of asbestos (chrysotile) has been related to the shape of the particles more than their composition. In other words, the substance itself is not carcinogenic – the shape is!

Chrysotile produces very thin fibers that can be many times longer than they are wide. When these become embedded in the lungs, larger particles can be coughed out but smaller particles need to be carried out by a type of white blood cell called a macrophage. Unfortunately, small asbestos fibers tend to be so long relative to their width that they tend to be actually longer than the macrophages. When the macrophages try to engulf them, the cells puncture and the macrophages die before they can do their job.

The EPA has targeted asbestos fibers over 8 micrometers in length as being the bad actors in causing mesothelioma (asbestos-related cancer), and claims that particles shorter than about 4 micrometers are not harmful (although this point is still being argued). Theoretically, the macrophages can successfully engulf shorter particles and get rid of them.

So why the cancer? There have been various theories about the mechanism. One theory is that the constant release of biochemical “distress signals” given off by the dying macrophages are the actual cause of the cancer. Another theory is that the asbestos particles have active surface sites for the generation of free radicals from oxygen, and that the free radicals are capable of reacting with and damaging the surrounding cells.

It’s an interesting story. The link below has everything that you need (it is basically a list of resource papers and articles) although you will have to do some work to sift through the material.

The summary I wrote here is just from memory. When I was in university many moons ago this was one of the hot research topics in our department, so I got to see a lot of presentations on the subject although it was not an area in which I was personally working.

Good luck on the project

Mesothelioma Asbestos Cancer Information

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One Response to “Asbestos And Cancer”

  1. Jade Grade Says:

    By searching and reviewing the past answers for this group you can probably find the websites of at least a dozen spammers that were using mesothelioma as an adsense word to try to funnel web traffic to their faux cancer websites. These spammers repeatedly lose their YA accounts so I doubt they ever made much money spamming YA.

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