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VIII.17 - Black and Brown Lung Disease

from Part VIII - Major Human Diseases Past and Present

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Kenneth F. Kiple
Affiliation:
Bowling Green State University, Ohio
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Summary

Black and brown lung are the names given by workers in the coal and textile industries, respectively, and by some physicians and public officials, to symptoms of respiratory distress associated with dusty work. Most physicians and epidemiologists have, however, preferred to categorize these symptoms as they relate to findings at autopsy and studies of pulmonary function and to name their appearance in particular patients as, respectively, coal workers’ pneumoconiosis and byssinosis. The terms “black lung” and “brown lung” are historical legacies of intense negotiations about the causes of respiratory distress and mortality among workers in the coal and textile industries of Europe and North America, especially since the nineteenth century. (For the conventional medical definitions of the pathology subsumed under the terms black lung and brown lung, see the extensive bibliographies in papers by Fox and Stone [1981] and Corn [1980]).

History and Geography

For many centuries, medical observers, and workers and their employers, have recognized respiratory distress and its consequences as an occupational hazard among underground miners and employees of industries that generate considerable dust (notably refineries, foundries, and the manufacturing of cotton, flax, and hemp). Pliny described the inhalation of “fatal dust” in the first century. In the sixteenth century, Agricola observed that miners, physicians, and engineers were aware of shortness of breath and premature death. In the early nineteenth century, pathologists observed that some miners in Scotland had black lesions on the lung at autopsy. The term pneumoconiosis appears to have been invented in 1867. Brown lung seems to have been named by analogy with black lung, apparently in the 1960s.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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References

Benedek, Thomas G. 1973. Rheumatoid pneumoconiosis: Documentation of onset and pathogenic considerations. American Journal of Medicine 55.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Corn, Jacqueline Karnell. 1981. Byssinosis – an historical perspective. American Journal of Industrial Medicine 2.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Elwood, P. C., et al. 1986. Respiratory disability in excotton workers. British Journal of Industrial Medicine 43.Google ScholarPubMed
Fox, Daniel M., and Stone, J. F.. 1980. Black lung: Miners’ militancy and medical uncertainty, 1968–72. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 54.Google Scholar
Judkins, Bennett M. 1986. We offer ourselves as evidence: Toward workers’ control of occupational health. Westport, Conn..Google Scholar
Kilburn, Kaye H. 1986. Byssinosis. In Maxcy–Rosenau public health and preventive medicine, ed. Last, John M. et al., 12th edition. Norwalk, Conn..Google Scholar
Merchant, James A. 1986. Coal workers’ pneumoconiosis. In Maxcy–Rosenau public health and preventive medicine, 12th edition, ed. Last, John M. et al. Norwalk, Conn..Google Scholar
Salvaggion, John E., et al. 1986. Immunologic responses to inhaled cotton dust. Environmental Health Perspectives 66.Google Scholar
Smith, Barbara Ellen. 1987. Digging our graves: Coal miners and the struggle over black lung disease. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Wegman, David H., et al. 1983. Byssinosis: A role for public health in the face of scientific uncertainty. American Journal of Public Health 73.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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