Ayrdes Benedita Duarte dos Anjos Pivetta, Clóvis Botelho
J Bras Pneumol.1997;23(4):179-188
The prevalence of respiratory symptoms in populations at risk or in populations not at risk is an indirect indicator of acute and chronic respiratory diseases, with a high grade of confidence from an epidemiological point of view. In order to contribute to this, the authors carried out a prevalence study among workers with occupational exposure to silica dust in a marble plant. The authors selected workers who worked with hard granite stone, slate and marble. Workers were submitted to a standardized questionnaire and 84 people were studied. All were male, mean age was (± SD) 26.2 (± 7.4 years), and had had short time of exposure to dust (52 workers worked less than 5 years in the marble industry). Thirty-four were smokers (10.0 (± 2.3) pack years), 9 former smokers, and 41 non-smokers. Twenty-four had cough, 30 sputum, 1 dyspnea grade III, 5 wheezing. Thirty-eight presented at least one of the studied respiratory symptoms and 9 presented chronic bronchitis. The lung function evaluated in 82 workers through spirometry was normal in 78 of the cases and an obstructive pattern was detected in 4 of them. A significant statistical association between chronic bronchitis and exposure time to stone dust was found (OR = 5.37; 95% CI = 1.01-28.74). However, that association was lost after other factors, such as cigarette smoking and age, were evaluated (OR = 1.21; 95% CI = 0.12-11.93). The association between smoking and bronchitis (OR = 14.18; 95% CI = 1.80-111.62) remained marginally significant even after controlling exposure time to stone dust and age (OR = 6.34; 95% CI = 0.76-52.94). Results suggest that among the marble industry workers studied, the prevalence of chronic bronchitis is more strongly associated to smoking to with exposure time to stone dust.