Symptoms and Medical Monitoring

What to know

Breathing dust from crystalline silica can lead to lung disease. Silica causes inflammation and scarring in the lungs. This condition causes permanent lung damage called silicosis. It is a progressive, debilitating, and sometimes fatal disease.

Doctor talking with patient and taking notes.

Symptoms

Symptoms may include:

  • Cough
  • Fatigue
  • Shortness of breath
  • Chest pain

There is no known cure for silicosis. Some patients may require a lung transplant. Workers exposed to silica and those who have silicosis are also at increased risk of tuberculosis (TB). TB is a contagious and potentially life-threatening infection.

Exposure to respirable crystalline silica also puts workers at risk for developing other serious diseases including:

Diagnosing

To diagnosis silicosis, a clinician needs two things:

  1. The worker must have a history of being exposed to respirable crystalline silica.
  2. There must be medical imaging like chest X-rays or tissue samples that show signs of the disease.

It is also important to exclude other possible causes of lung disease. Findings of silicosis can be seen with chest x-rays, but computerized tomography (CT scans) have greater sensitivity.

Timeline

The time from initial exposure to when symptoms first appear (the latency period) depends on duration and intensity of exposure. Higher exposures result in shorter latency periods and faster disease development.

There are different types of silicosis. The type with the quickest onset is acute silicosis. This can occur after a few weeks or months of exposure to very high levels of silica. Acute silicosis causes parts of the lung fill with fluid typically causing severe illness or death.

Accelerated silicosis occurs after high levels of exposure and typically occurs after 5 to 10 years. Chronic silicosis is the most common type. It occurs after 10 or more years of exposure to lower levels of silica. Both accelerated and chronic types of silicosis have the same radiographic appearance and are set apart based on their different latency periods.

Periodic medical monitoring helps to detect silicosis at early stages. This is important so workers can avoid further exposure and limit disease progression. Healthcare providers who suspect a patient's health problems are caused by silica should report to their local or state health department.