Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 5 , Pages 231-234, May 2008

Occupational airways disease

Paul Cullinan MD FRCP is Reader in Occupational and Environmental Medicine at the National Heart and Lung Institute (Imperial College), London, UK. He is also Honorary Consultant in Respiratory Medicine at the Royal Brompton Hospital, London. His research interests include the epidemiology of occupational lung diseases, particularly of occupational asthma, and other environmental determinants of respiratory disease. Competing interests: none declared

Abstract 

Occupational exposures are an important – but probably neglected – cause of airways disease. Nowhere is this more important than in asthma; 10% of all new or recurrent cases of asthma in adulthood can be related to an exposure encountered at work. Pre-existing asthma in which symptoms are provoked at work (‘work-exacerbated asthma’) should be carefully distinguished from disease that has arisen de novo as a result of a workplace exposure (‘occupational asthma’); the two pose quite different diagnostic, management and legal issues. A firm diagnosis of occupational asthma requires a low threshold of suspicion, careful attention to a full job history and the judicious application of simple but powerful diagnostic tools. Once a diagnosis is established, appropriate management allows an important opportunity for cure in many cases, although the socio-economic cost to the patient can be high. Airways disease may also arise from toxic exposures to respiratory irritants at work. In most cases, symptoms are self-limiting, but an asthma-like syndrome (‘irritant-induced asthma’) occasionally results. Other persistent airways diseases from irritant exposures – such as obliterative bronchiolitis – are rare and require specialist consideration.

Keywords: irritant-induced asthma, occupation, occupational asthma, work-exacerbated asthma

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PII: S1357-3039(08)00051-0

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2008.02.008

Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 5 , Pages 231-234, May 2008