Publications by authors named "Bukhtiyarov Igor"

Article Synopsis
  • - The meta-analysis evaluated the global prevalence of occupational hypersensitivity pneumonitis (OHP), analyzing 46 observational studies with over 2.8 million participants from various occupations.
  • - Overall, the prevalence of OHP was found to be 4.2%, with significant variations based on occupation and region, notably higher in printers (57.14%) and tobacco workers (26.32%).
  • - South America had the highest prevalence at 16.71%, while age and smoking were identified as factors influencing these variability rates among different occupations.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined mortality rates among workers at the largest chrysotile mine in Asbest, Russia, from 1975 to 2010, with follow-up until 2015.
  • It included over 30,000 workers, finding significant lung cancer mortality in men related to cumulative dust exposure, while women showed a weaker association.
  • The research confirmed a high risk of mesothelioma in workers with substantial fiber exposure, emphasizing the need for ongoing monitoring of worker health.
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Objectives: Exposure assessment for retrospective industrial cohorts are often hampered by limited availability of historical measurements. This study describes the development of company-specific job-exposure matrices (JEMs) based on measurements collected over five decades for a cohort study of 35 837 workers (Asbest Chrysotile Cohort Study) in the Russian Federation to estimate their cumulative exposure to chrysotile containing dust and fibres.

Methods: Almost 100 000 recorded stationary dust measurements were available from 1951-2001 (factories) and 1964-2001 (mine).

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A historical cohort study in workers occupationally exposed to chrysotile was set up in the town of Asbest, the Russian Federation, to study their cause-specific mortality, with a focus on cancer. Chrysotile has different chemical and physical properties compared with other asbestos fibres; therefore it is important to conduct studies specifically of chrysotile and in different geographical regions to improve the knowledge about its carcinogenicity. Setting was the town of Asbest, Sverdlovsk oblast, the Russian Federation.

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Objectives: A historical cohort study of cancer mortality is being conducted among workers in a chrysotile mine and its enrichment factories in the town of Asbest, Russian Federation. Because individual-level information on tobacco use is not available for Asbest Chrysotile Cohort members, a cross-sectional survey of smoking behaviours was conducted among active and retired workers.

Methods: Self-administered questionnaires were completed by active workers during meetings organised by occupational safety personnel.

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Space travelers are exposed to unique forms of ionizing radiation that pose potentially serious health hazards. Prior analyses have attempted to quantify excess mortality risk for astronauts exposed to space radiation, but low statistical power has frustrated inferences. If exposure to deep space radiation were causally linked to deaths due to two particular causes, e.

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Introduction: Over 500 people from different countries have been to space since the first manned spaceflight in 1961. Factors of space and spaceflights might cause functional and somatic disorders, leading to increased mortality. Our research goal was to assess cause-specific risk of death among Soviet and Russian cosmonauts who had at least one spaceflight.

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Objectives: Mining and processing of chrysotile, an established carcinogen, has been undertaken in Asbest, Russian Federation since the late 1800s. Dust concentrations were routinely recorded at the open-pit mine and its asbestos-enrichment factories. We examined the temporal trends in these dust concentrations from 1951 to 2001.

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Introduction: Historic dust concentrations are available in a large-scale cohort study of workers in a chrysotile mine and processing factories in Asbest, Russian Federation. Parallel dust (gravimetric) and fibre (phase-contrast optical microscopy) concentrations collected in 1995, 2007 and 2013/14 were used to determine if dust to fibre conversion factors can be estimated.

Materials/subjects And Methods: Daily medians of multiple parallel dust and fibre concentrations by sampling points were used to derive fibre to dust ratios.

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