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Study cites disease, WTC link
A serious ailment that scars the lungs is found in Ground Zero workers at a higher rate than before 9/11
May 9, 2007 (AP) —Rescue workers and firefighters
contracted a serious lung-scarring disease called sarcoidosis at a
much higher rate after the Sept. 11 attacks than before, said a study
that is the first to link the disease to exposure to toxic dust at
Ground Zero.
The study, published by nine doctors including the medical officer
monitoring city firefighters, Dr. David Prezant, found that firefighters
and rescue workers contracted sarcoidosis in the year after Sept. 11,
2001, at a rate more than five times higher than the years before the
attacks.
Sarcoidosis, which can be life-threatening, causes an inflammation in
the lungs that deposits tiny cells in the organs, leaving damaging scar
tissues. Some rescue workers and others who were exposed to the dust
cloud that enveloped lower Manhattan after the World Trade Center collapsed
say they contracted the disease from their work at Ground Zero.
The study compared the rates of contracting sarcoidosis among fire department
employees for 15 years before Sept. 11 and for five years after it. It
said firefighters who showed symptoms of the disease on chest X-rays
underwent more intensive exams.
After the trade center attack, 26 firefighters were diagnosed with sarcoidosis,
the study found. Thirteen were diagnosed in the first year after the
attacks, which represents a rate of 86 per 100,000. In the 15 years before
the attack, the rate of sarcoidosis was 15 per 100,000, the study found.
None of the 26 rescue workers, who are in their 30s and 40s, has died
of the disease, and about 10 have improved or recovered since their diagnoses,
the study found. Two of the firefighters were former smokers, the study
found.
Dr. Jacqueline Moline, who directs the largest monitoring program for
Ground Zero workers, which has screened more than 20,000 people at Mount
Sinai Medical Center, said several patients in her program have been
diagnosed with sarcoidosis.
Mount Sinai plans to publish its own research in the next few months
on the rate associated with Ground Zero work. Last fall, it published
a study concluding that 70 percent of Ground Zero workers suffered from
different respiratory illnesses after the attacks.
"We're all looking to see various diseases that might develop as
a result of 9/11 exposure," Moline said. "We have to be vigilant."
The study was published this week in the May issue of CHEST Physician,
a journal published by the American College of Chest Physicians.
