Aug 31

How To Choose A Mesothelioma Law Firm When Seeking Compensation For Asbestos Exposure
By Sara Sentor

The person who represents your interest in a mesothelioma case has to be chosen very carefully. The success of your case depends as much on your attorney as it does on the facts presented in the case. Your mesothelioma lawyer should have a good amount of knowledge of laws regarding mesothelioma and at least a working understanding of the disease itself.

A lot of paperwork is required to prove a case of negligence by the company that processed the asbestos which causes mesothelioma so your lawyer has to be able to gather, organize and present all the necessary information well. You also want someone who understands what you are dealing with emotionally, psychologically and physically so that your case is as important to them as it is to you.

Choosing Your Representation
When you choose a lawyer or law firm to represent your case you should be comfortable with all members of the staff who are involved with the case. You should view them as being competent and experienced enough to handle your case. If that is not true, you should rethink your decision to file your case with the firm and contact other law firms to find one you are happy with.

Questions for the Firm
You should ask questions of the lawyers until you are completely satisfied that they are the best team to handle your case.

Here is a list of questions you should ask the attorney(s) interested in handling your mesothelioma lawsuit:
Does your law firm handle mesothelioma cases or will I be referred to another law firm? If so, what is the name of the law firm that handles my type of case?
How long have you been involved in handling mesothelioma lawsuits and do you handle other types of medical law? What about toxic substance cases?

How man mesothelioma cases are currently being handled by the law firm?

(In the case of an individual attorney) How many mesothelioma lawsuits have you personally handled and what is your success rate in and out of court?

How many mesothelioma cases has your firm taken to trial and what is the success rate of your trial cases? Are there lawyers on staff who handle the trial cases?
In settlement cases, who handles the legal proceedings and what is the firm’s success rate with settlements? What is the range of settlement amount and is medical care typically included?

http://www.rarehope.com

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Aug 30

Mesothelioma and Asbestos
By Jason Gluckman

Mesothelioma is an uncommon form of cancer, commonly linked with prior exposure to asbestos. In this disease, cancerous cells grow in the protective lining (mesothelium) covering the internal organs of the body. This disease is commonly located in the outer lining of the chest cavity and lungs (pleura). It can also be found in the lining of the abdominal cavity (peritoneum), or the sac that envelops the heart (pericardium). People who contract this disease have invariably worked on jobs that put them in close contact with asbestos.

One of the characteristics of mesothelioma is that symptoms can appear very late, sometimes 50 years following first contact with asbestos. Symptoms of pleural mesothelioma, the disease’s most common form, include discomfort in the chest and difficulty in breathing. Symptoms of peritoneal mesothelioma, another form of the disease, include weight loss, abdominal swelling and pain. Blood clotting, bowel obstruction and fever are other symptoms of this type of mesothelioma. If the malignancy has spread to other body parts, then symptoms may include pain, face swelling and difficulty in swallowing food. However, it is important to remember that these symptoms are not exclusive to this disease they can happen with other less severe conditions as well.

Over the past two decades, the rate of mesothelioma cases has gone up. Still, in the larger picture, it is a relatively rare cancer. The percentage of cases largely depends on the populations’ exposure to asbestos. In the United States, it has been reported that that frequency may have hit the highest point at 15 per million in 2004. This trend is thought to continue in other parts of the world. Interestingly, mesothelioma is more common in men than women. The risk of this disease augments with age, but a person of any age or gender can be affected. About one-fifth to one-third of all mesothelioma cases are peritoneal.

Mesothelioma Asbestos provides detailed information on Mesothelioma and Asbestos, Mesothelioma Asbestos Diseases, Mesothelioma Asbestos Treatment, Asbestos Mesothelioma Cancer and more. Mesothelioma Asbestos is affiliated with Mesothelioma Diagnosis Support.

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Aug 29

Mesothelioma Legislation: The Fight Against Asbestos
By Ermenegildo Billar

In the eve of last century, asbestos was considered the ideal construction material. It was resistant to fire, isolated electricity conduction was easy to use and above was, was very inexpensive. But problems rose when asbestos was proved to produce fatal diseases when inhaled. One of them is mesothelioma.

This dreadful mesothelioma has taken hundreds of thousands of lives throughout the years. Lives of hard working men that have families. Men that work to bring food on the table for their children and wives. Men that return home covered in asbestos dust and not knowing how lethal it is, hug their children and kiss them good night. Men that were infected with asbestos lung mesothelioma not even knowing what mesothelioma is.

General Statistics

You would think that a mesothelioma legislation would be created in order to ban the horrific use of asbestos. However, The Environmental Protection Agency has still not banned the use of asbestos. In September 2004, the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine said that 1.3 million US workers in construction sites are in danger of obtaining pleural mesothelioma and peritoneal mesothelioma from asbestos inhaling.

Although is hasn t been banned, many lawsuits have been filed against the asbestos producing companies since 1929. As a result more than 25 of the richest companies in the US that produced asbestos filed bankruptcy because of all the compensations they had to pay to their mesothelioma diseased workers one man winning a record of $2.3 million.

Litigation Reaction

Much is being made by the US congress in order to find a common ground between the thousands of plaintiffs and the defending companies. Such as considering legislation act “Fairness in Asbestos Injury Resolution Act of 2005″. This would create a $140 billion trust fund in order to meet civil litigations that would compensate the victims with the malignant mesothelioma.

After certain events in his life, Ermenegildo Billar has dedicated years of his life to understanding and helping people with the malignant mesothelioma. For your comfort he decided to create www.infothelioma.com so you can have easy access to his research.

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http://EzineArticles.com/?Mesothelioma-Legislation:-The-Fight-Against-Asbestos&id=294565

Aug 28

How Asbestos Litigation Affects You
By William Gallahue

The Debate Over Asbestos Legislation

This year a growing legal crisis may affect you more than you could imagine. With proposed bills that would limit asbestos company liability and significantly reduce payouts, some worry that lawmakers who are in charge of advocating for everyday America may be pandering to special interests.

Prolonged asbestos exposure can lead to dangerous health conditions including mesothelioma, asbestosis, and lung cancer. Every year 2500 to 3000 new cases are diagnosed every year with thousands more outside the United States as other countries have been slow to adopt asbestos bans (though asbestos is not completely outlawed in the United States and exists in many products manufactured today).

The conditions are frightening and for the most part treatment only prolongs a person’s life by a short span. An indiscriminate killer set loose by the industrialized nations of the world.

So when someone is diagnosed what do we owe them? An apology for their terminal illness is simply not enough of a measure to compensate them for the pain their body, family, and spirit will have to endure.

The problem that lawmakers are trying to address is the abundance of cases currently sitting dormant in our legal system. The case backlog is enormous and often cases (if unsettled) take years before they go before the courts.

We have a duty to balance compensation and cases because if this system continues, the expected case filings over the next decade will create a standstill for legal action.

The problem with balancing is that each side will have to incur losses. The creation of a national fund is the best proposal but claimants have to adhere to guidelines that may eliminate credible cases (September 11th created intense exposure over short periods for example). The pool will receive less than if they made an individual claim but the victims will be able to enjoy their compensation before death.

Under current proposals though, that compromise over compensation would make the filing process futile. When looking at some recent settlements in the pool format, victims who would have received millions received in the range of low thousands.

So who benefits under current plans and recent settlements? Corporations.

Their civic duties should never be compromised by lackadaisical legislation that shifts some of the legal responsibilities from their shoulders.

It’s a battle that is even pitting victims against one another which is exactly what corporations need because a divided opponent never wins.

Americans have now put that question to Congress however.

“The Fairness in Asbestos Injury Resolution Act of 2005 came to existence shortly after March of 2004 after Pres. Bush. proposed limits on asbestos related “junk” lawsuits at a speech in Detroit. The Act would establish a $140 billion trust fund to supplant litigation as a means to compensate victims of asbestos and limit liability.” -Asbestos and Mesothelioma Advocacy

The maximum award would be $750,000 but with an estimated 500,000 possible claims. The fund would quickly deteriorate and could not pay victims. ($375,000,000,000,000 would be needed).

The bill is still being looked at by the Senate Judiciary Committee but as you can see it faces a tough fight for approval.

I am aware that many people see asbestos litigation as an avenue of junk lawsuits in the same vein as the “hot coffee” judgment to the woman at the drive thru but these are real people with an incurable disease.

With only months before a round of major elections, try asking candidates their position on the bill. Likely most of them would not know what it is you’re talking about. However trial lawyer associations across America are the parties with the biggest to gain or lose.

Corporate defense attorneys would lose significant billable hours for services rendered to corporations while plaintiff attorneys would see a loss because fund rulings would not necessarily require legal counsel.

Thus on something perceived as “out there” and insignificant, you can already see how it affects your government and possibly your neighbors.

Please get more information about asbestos exposure and related illnesses at Mesothelioma and Asbestos

William Gallahue is an internet journalist who covers a number of topics. Please visit Asbestos and Mesothelioma for more information.

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Aug 27

New Georgia Law Limits Asbestos Lawsuits
By William Gallahue

May 1, 2007 - With a quick stroke of his pen, Gov. Sonny Perdue approved a new bill that will limit asbestos lawsuits strictly to those demonstrating illness.

Sponsored by State Senator John Wiles (R-Marietta) and endorsed by Georgia s Trial Lawyer Association, it aims to clear court dockets by allowing priority for cases where the plaintiff can definitively prove illness from asbestos exposure. Wiles said of the bill, “This would allow people that are truly sick to move to the front of the line.”

Before passage of the law, a lawsuit could be filed if a person was exposed but did not have a confirmed diagnosis of an asbestos related condition. The number of cases generated lead to legal critics consistently arguing that asbestos litigation was creating an avalanche of junk lawsuits.

A recent study found that in the United States alone more than 730,000 asbestos lawsuits had been filed through 2002 and at least 8,400 defendants have received more than $70 billion. Georgia bears a number of these lawsuits as it is home to the headquarters of the Georgia-Pacific company which has long been a target of asbestos lawsuits.

Asbestos was commonly used for insulation and fireproofing before the 1980s when its health risks began to emerge. It is a carcinogen when inhaled and exposure can lead to the often fatal disease mesothelioma. Asbestos exposure related diseases generally take 20+ years to develop and patients are often diagnosed when they are in the advanced stages.

This is not the first time the state has moved to try and limit asbestos lawsuits. An earlier law was dismissed by The Georgia Supreme Court in 2006 and the new law is expected to be challenged as well.

The new law is similar to measures enacted in Ohio, Florida, Texas, Kansas, South Carolina and Texas. A person filing a claim in Georgia must demonstrate that they have some physical impairment from exposure to asbestos. Others who were exposed to asbestos wouldn t be able to sue until they became ill, under the law.

More information can be found here.

William Gallahue is an internet journalist who covers a number of topics.

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http://EzineArticles.com/?New-Georgia-Law-Limits-Asbestos-Lawsuits&id=548399

Aug 26

Is Asbestos Killing You?
By Michael Russell

Asbestos is mined as a dense rock, which easily separates into fine fibers. Asbestos fibers are especially favored as building blocks for various materials because of its strength, temperature resistance and chemical inertness.

Undoubtedly, asbestos has provided mankind with so many uses. However, asbestos comes with accompanying health hazards. Studies show that about 1.3 million people are exposed to asbestos at the workplace. These include people who are working in the construction industry and those in the manufacture of products made of asbestos. Workers in the construction industry are especially exposed to the hazards of asbestos during building demolition and or renovation wherein asbestos products are removed from the site.

Although most of us may have been exposed to asbestos one time or another, illness caused by asbestos exposure is only evident to those people who are regularly exposed to this mineral. Since asbestos fibers are extremely fine, they are easily suspended in the air. Since experts discovered the hazardous effects of asbestos exposure, its use has been regulated from that time on. The use of asbestos in products like imitation logs for gas-burning fireplaces and spackling compound has long been banned in the United States. Asbestos regulation is aimed towards the reduction of asbestos fiber inhalation by workers and other people.

Prolonged exposure to the fine asbestos fibers suspended in the air may result into a form of pneumoconiosis known as asbestosis. Stiff lungs with an excess of scar or fibrous tissue are often the characteristic sign of asbestosis. A person suffering from this disease may find it difficult to breath because of the stiffness in the lungs. Much effort is needed in order to expand the lungs during breathing. Abnormal sounds in the chest may be heard. In some cases, the membrane surrounding the lungs called the pleura may develop calcified plaques. Asbestosis patients will experience shortness in breathing accompanied with dry cough. They may also develop clubbed fingertips with bluish hands and feet due to a deficient supply of oxygen in the blood.

It will take at least 10 years of exposure to asbestos before asbestosis appears. Asbestosis however may worsen once present in the body even when there is no more exposure to the offending substance. It has been observed that construction workers, pipe fitters, shipbuilders and those working in brake lining factories have higher risk of developing asbestosis. Cancer of the lungs is also a possible consequence of a long-term asbestos inhalation. Additionally, cigarette-smoking asbestos workers are four times at greater risk of developing lung cancer than people who are not exposed to asbestos. A rare type of cancer called pleural mesothelioma is also linked to asbestos inhalation. Studies show that about 70% of pleural mesothelioma victims has a history of asbestos exposure.

No treatment has been found to be effective against asbestosis. In lung cancer associated with asbestosis, surgery can be the form of treatment although the general outcome is often poor.

Therefore, in order to prevent any asbestos related diseases, it is important to provide proper dust control in workplaces where asbestos is processed. Studies show that the incidence of lung cancer and other asbestos related illnesses can be significantly reduced through proper dust control and management.

Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to Asbestos

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Aug 25

How to Sense Low Levels of Asbestos in Your Daily Environment. (Part II)
By Rick Raymond

Most people find it difficult to believe that a tiny dust material, too small to see, can cause such havoc with the human body.
As a construction worker, I may have an advantage in identifying the materials which shed this residue, but this also tends to make me more vulnerable to it s effects. This, in turn gives me the incentive to do what it takes to avoid it or possibly shed it myself if I should accidentally make contact with it from any number of situations.

How do I determine that I ve accidentally contacted the residue?

To start with, what you have to understand is ” this material is light enough to stay airborne for long periods of time, it is very dry and staticy, it can leave a bitter-salty taste in your mouth, it can be irritating to the eyes and sinuses and it attaches to the hairs on your skin and head leaving a staticy-iching feeling over your entire body.( Sometimes this sensation is subtle and other times it s pronounced, depending on the type of asbestos material it came from and the amount of dust you ve contacted.)” Combined with the many chance encounters of this material, this presents an interesting challenge for which few are willing to embark.

If you are ready to take on this challenge, the first step in getting relief from this sensation requires removing and isolating the clothes you were wearing and showering thoroughly. After dressing, the next logical step is to backtrack and identify the items and locations that you made contact with between the time you made the contact with the residue and the point where the clothes were shed. If these were solid surface items, they can be wiped clean with disposable towels and either water or a spray cleaner such as orange cleaner. If they were cloth surfaces such as cloth car seats or furnture, the simplest method is thorough vacuuming with a vacuum cleaner which includes a hepa filter.

Next comes the choice of disposing of the clothes or trying to clean them. If you try to wash them in a clothes washer, one washing wil not do it. Also, it s important to wash them separately from other clothes. Cotton clothes will eventually clear up, where polyester or nylon may never come clean of this residue.

Given the previous information to be true, one soon sees the logic in wearing only cotton clothes and being aware of the path you take after contacting any suspected situations.

If this routine doesn t interest you in the least, you probably have no incentive to follow it.

If you suffer from any of the following maladies which I ve been able to associate with an unfortunate contact with asbestos dust, you may want to try this routine just to see if the condition clears up.

Any entry of this dust to the air passages can cause irritation, such as, the sinuses, notrils, eustation tube, back of throats, broncial tubes or even down to the stomach. Consequentally, illnesses, such as, sore throats, strep throat, toncilitis, sinus infections and inner ear infections can all have their beginnings with unrelenting irritation caused by asbestos residues. Irritation to the broncial tubes can be the beginnings of broncitis and pneumonia. A sour or sore feeling in the isofigus, which may mimic heart burn, is another result of exposure.

The eyes and outer ear can also suffer from exposure causing
pink eye and blurring, as well as outer ear infections.This is another moist area where a fine dust can be desolved into body fluids. As these fluids dry out, the fine asbestos residue is left destroying the surounding tissue causing irritation and immune system responses.

The largest surface affected is the skin. Many different effects can be seen, depending on the location. The face and shoulders commonly are affected by acne, if that individual is prone to it. Asbestos fibers become embedded in the large pores
and cause constant irritation and eventually infection by the acne bacteria which is commonly on the skin. Other areas of the face where contact with a hat, pillow or even ones hair that is embedded with some level of asbestos residue can show signs of acne. Other areas may have anything from dry, cracking skin to contact dermatitis or even yeast infection.

I ve also found athelete s foot to follow an accidental walk through an area recently stripped of asbestos tiles. The shoes become embeded with the substance due to the amount of asbestos dust left in the mastic adhesive and porous concrete. Wearing these shoes causes the skin of the feet and toes to become vunerable to fungus infection, such as atheletes foot. Some portion of this dust makes it s way up to other parts of the body as well, each with their own story of immune system compromise.

This is just another day in the life of body exposed to low levels of asbestos residues encountered in any number of situations we should avoid when they are recognized.

Rick Raymond is a Construction Electrician with a sincere interest in health and science. For more information see the following sites:

http://www.ewg.org/asbestos/facts/fact1.php

http://whitelung.org/pubs/workexp/dose/html

http://ezinearticles.com/?id=20008

http://www.livingwithasbestos.com

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Aug 24

The Asbestos Mesothelioma Cover-Up
By Patricia Hughes

THE ASBESTOS - Mesothelioma COVER-UP
Mesothelioma is caused by inhaling or ingesting asbestos fibers. The books Outrageous Misconduct: The Asbestos Industry on Trial, written by Paul Brodeur, Pantheon Books, New York, New York, 1985, and Asbestos: Medical and Legal Aspects, 4th Edition, written by Barry I. Castleman, Aspen Law and Business, Engelwood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1996 and other sources of information show that asbestos companies had extensive knowledge that the use of asbestos in their products and by their employees would cause serious health issues for individuals in the future. Yet companies continued to use asbestos and placed the lives and health of their employees in jeopardy. The following are just a small sample of events that occurred that provided companies with knowledge that asbestos was dangerous:

1918: Frederick Hoffman, a medical statistician for the Prudential Life Insurance Company, reported in a United States Department of Labor Bulletin that American life insurance companies generally deny coverage to asbestos workers because of the “assumed health-injurious conditions of the industry.”

1930: One major asbestos company, Johns-Manville, produces a report, for internal company use only, detailing the fatalities and medical injuries of asbestos workers.

1932: A letter from the United States Bureau of Mines to asbestos manufacturer Eagle-Picher states, “It is now known that asbestos dust is one of the most dangerous dusts to which man is exposed.”

1933: Metropolitan Life Insurance Company doctors find that 29% of the workers at one Johns-Manville plant are suffering from asbestosis. Johns-Manville settles lawsuits by 11 employees on the condition that the lawyer for the employees agrees that he will not bring any new actions against Johns-Manville.

1934: Officials at Johns-Manville and Raybestos Manhattan, rewrite an article about the diseases of asbestos workers written by a Metropolitan Life Insurance Company doctor to minimize the danger of asbestos dust.

1936: A group of asbestos companies agree to sponsor research on the health effects of asbestos dust, but require that the companies have complete control over the disclosure of the results.

1942-43: The president of Johns-Manville says that the managers of another company were “a bunch of fools for notifying employees who had asbestosis.” When one of the people in attendance ask, “Do you mean to tell me you would let them work until they drop dead?” According to deposition testimony, the response was, “Yes. We save a lot of money that way.”

1944: The Journal of the Medical Association reports that asbestos is one of the “agents known or suspected to cause occupational cancer.”

1951: Asbestos companies remove all references to cancer before allowing publication of research they sponsor concerning exposure to asbestos.

1953: National Gypsum s safety director wrote to the Indiana Division of Industrial Hygiene, recommending that acoustic plaster mixers wear respirators “because of the asbestos used on the product.” Another company official notes that the letter was “full of dynamite,” and urges that the letter be retrieved before reaching its destination. A memo from those files notes that the company “succeeded in stopping” the letter which “will be modified.”

1989 and 1991: In 1989, the United States Environmental Protection Agency bans asbestos and most of its uses, but, in 1991, asbestos companies win a federal lawsuit which overturns the EPA s asbestos ban.

1999: The Florida Supreme Court rules that Owens Corning willfully withheld information about the dangers of working with the company s asbestos products. The Florida Supreme Court describes it as a “blatant disregard for human safety involving large numbers of people put at life-threatening risks.”
As stated, the above actions by these companies are just a small sample of the many actions by companies using asbestos which did so in disregard of the safety of their employees and other innocent victims. Companies, who so frivolously ignored the health of the public and their own employees, are the targets of our litigation
Unfortunately, millions of people have been exposed to asbestos over the years. Only now are we able to see the disastrous effects of asbestos exposure in the workplace.

As with other cancers, a speedy diagnosis is important to effective treatment of mesothelioma. If you believe that you may have mesothelioma and that you worked with asbestos in the past, you may wish to inform your doctor of this fact.

It has been well documented that asbestos is dangerous and many of these companies ignored the health risk to their employees. If you or a loved one has been diagnosed with mesothelioma in the last five years you should seek the advice of an experienced mesothelioma lawyer so that you will know your rights under the law. Lawyers who have experience in these cases and who have won significant awards for their clients will best be able to help you or your loved one.

For more information contact: Maune Raichle Law firm 1-800-358-5922. The firm specializes in mesothelioma cases. Or go to: www.legal-mesothelioma-help.com

Patricia Hughes works for an Internet marketing firm, ePlus Marketing. For more information contact: Maune Raichle Law firm
1-800-358-5922. The firm specializes in mesothelioma cases. Or go to: www.legal-mesothelioma-help.com

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Aug 23

Ohio Asbestos Lawyers
By Alison Cole

Most people get affected if they are exposed to asbestos at their place of work or in their environment. The inhalation of asbestos fiber results in several kinds of cancer including mesothelioma. It may also lead to lung diseases. Many companies, in spite of knowing the hazardous effects of asbestos, do not take any action to protect their employees, from this deadly substance. Generally, it takes years for asbestos related illnesses to come to the surface. Most of the time, the person does not even realize that, the diseases have occurred due to high asbestos exposure. Asbestos law has recently been introduced to control the use of this dangerous mineral. Ohio exercises strict regulations to combat the sinister effects of asbestos. If a person or their family is suffering from any asbestos-related disease, he can contact a proficient Ohio asbestos lawyer to file a lawsuit.

Mesothelioma is one of the most fatal kind of cancers, and the average lifespan of a victim after diagnosis is barely 2 years. Ohio asbestos lawyers strive to provide justice, to such victims or families of such victims who are undergoing such traumatic experiences. According to Ohio asbestos law, the victim must be diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease to file a lawsuit.

The victim of asbestos-related disease can obtain free consultation from the many reputed lawyers, who are experts in Ohio asbestos law. These lawyers study and analyze the case of a victim, so that they can build a strong case to extract maximum compensation. Victims must be fully aware of all the aspects of asbestos laws prevailing in Ohio, to file for asbestos claims in this state. Typically, asbestos claims refer to claims for damages, losses, injury or medical expenses incurred for the treatment of the victim.

The victims of asbestos-related disease may not find a good Ohio asbestos lawyer very easily. Not many lawyers have expertise and experience in Mesothelioma-related lawsuits. The victims may have to conduct some research to find a good lawyer. Internet is a good source for obtaining a list of reputed Ohio asbestos lawyers.

Ohio Lawyers provides detailed information on Ohio Lawyers, Ohio Accident Lawyers, Ohio Real Estate Lawyers, Ohio Bankruptcy Lawyers and more. Ohio Lawyers is affiliated with Pennsylvania DUI Law.

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Aug 22

Mesothelioma Asbestos Diseases
By Jason Gluckman

The most common diseases caused by asbestos are asbestosis and pleural disease. The most general forms of asbestos cancer are mesothelioma and lung cancer. The former is also occasionally called mesothelioma cancer or simply “meso”.

Asbestos dust is also responsible for numerous types of throat cancer, including pharyngeal cancer, esophageal cancer, and laryngeal cancer. Stomach and colon cancer are two other types of cancer related to asbestos.

It is vital to note that the latency period, which is the period between actually being in contact with the mineral and the onset of asbestos cancer or a disease related to asbestos, can be quite long. In some cases, it can be over 50 years after an individual’s first contact with asbestos that symptoms of asbestos cancer or any other asbestos disease is seen. Owing to this latency period, individuals exposed to this mineral decades back are still in jeopardy, today, to catch this illness. A trained medical professional can correctly conclude whether a person has asbestos disease or asbestos cancer. It is prudent for anybody working with asbestos to frequently consult a medical professional.

Asbestosis is another well-known disease caused by inhaling high volumes of asbestos fibers. Protracted gathering of fibers in the lungs can lead to the scarring of lung tissues. The most common complaint by a person who has contracted asbestosis is shortness of breath upon exertion. This condition is also called dyspnea. Also, a dry cough becomes more bothersome as the disease progresses. Asbestosis can lead to many other lung diseases, particularly pneumonia, that has a propensity to target weakened lungs. Furthermore, for individuals with asbestosis, the chances of getting lung cancer are multiplied by about 5 times.

Mesothelioma Asbestos provides detailed information on Mesothelioma and Asbestos, Mesothelioma Asbestos Diseases, Mesothelioma Asbestos Treatment, Asbestos Mesothelioma Cancer and more. Mesothelioma Asbestos is affiliated with Mesothelioma Diagnosis Support.

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