Las Aldeas-Inversores   Investment Management   Contact Us   Escrow Services   Las Aldeas-Progress   Real Estate Services   Las Aldeas-Work  
Login   Investment   Real Estate   Law Firm   International   Projects   Services   Contact Us  
 
 
 

 

 

ASBESTOS

What is Asbestos?

Asbestos is the name for a group of six different fibrous minerals which occur naturally in the environment. These fibers are impervious to heat, fire, chemicals, and biological degradation; they do not dissolve in water or evaporate, and they have no detectable odor or taste. Because of these properties, asbestos has been widely used by industry in manufactured products such as building materials, friction products, and heat resistant fabrics.

Chrysotile, or white asbestos, belongs to the serpentine family of minerals, and accounts for 95 per cent of all asbestos used in the United States. The other five, amosite, crocidolite, and the fibrous varieties of tremolite, actinolite, and anthophyllite, belong to amphibole family. While all forms of asbestos are dangerous and may cause cancer, the amphiboles are considered to be the most dangerous.

Chrysotile asbestos fibers are flexible and curved, while amphibole fibers are most often brittle and have a rod or needle-like shape. Asbestos fiber masses break apart easily, and become tiny airbourne particles that may easily be inhaled or swallowed and cause serious health problems many years later.

How is Asbestos Used?

Asbestos has been mined and used commercially in North America since the late 1800s, but its use increased dramatically during and after World War II. The building and construction industry uses it for strenStayInvest Law Firm hening cements and plastics as well as for insulation, fireproofing, and sound absorption; the shipbuilding industry has used asbestos to insulate boilers, steampipes, and hot water pipes; the automotive industry uses asbestos in vehicle brake shoes and clutch pads. Some other applications include:

  • Asbestos cement sheet and pipe products used for water supply and sewage piping, roofing and siding, casings for electrical wires, fire protection material, electrical switchboards and components, and residential and industrial building materials;
  • Friction products, such as clutch facings, brake linings for automobiles, gaskets, and industrial friction materials;
  • Products containing asbestos paper, such as table pads, and heat-protective mats, heat and electrical wire insulation, industrial filters for beverages, and underlying material for sheet flooring;
  • Asbestos textile products, such as packing components, roofing materials, and heat and fire resistant fabrics (including blankets and curtains); and
  • Other products including ceiling and floor tile; gaskets and packings; paints, coatings, and adhesives; caulking and patching tape; artificial ashes and embers for use in gas fireplaces; and plastics.
  • More on asbestos exposure in the workplace

 

In the late 1970s, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission banned the use of asbestos in wallboard patching compounds and gas fireplaces because these products released excessive amounts of asbestos fibers into the environment. Asbestos was voluntarily withdrawn by the manufacturers of electric hair dryers. In 1989, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) banned all new uses of asbestos, however, uses established prior to 1989 are still allowed. Asbestos is currently used most frequently in gaskets and in roofing and friction products.

Who Is at Risk?

Since the early 1940s, millions of Americans have been exposed to asbestos in the course of their jobs in the construction trades and in military service. Although it is known that the risk to workers increases with heavier exposure and longer exposure times, asbestos-related illnesses have been found in individuals with only brief exposures. Because of the long latency period, no signs of illness may be apparent for 20 to 50 or more years.

Family members of workers heavily exposed to asbestos also face an increased risk of developing mesothelioma. This is most often the result of asbestos dust being brought into the home on the shoes, clothing, skin, and hair of workers. This type of exposure is referred to as paraoccupational or household exposure.

It is important to remember that not everyone exposed to asbestos will develop diseases related to their exposure. In fact, many will experience no ill effects whatsoever. Asbestos that is bonded into finished products such as walls, tiles, and pipes poses no risk to health as long as these products are not damaged or disturbed in such a way that fibers are released into the air. It is when asbestos fibers are released and inhaled or digested that individuals are at risk for developing asbestos disease. Once these fibers work their way into body tissues, they may stay there indefinitely.

Navy Veterans Diagnosed with Mesothelioma

Zonolite Insulation and Asbestos

Asbestos in the home

 

Related: American Lung Association of North Carolina

 

To receive a FREE Mesothelioma Web information packet** or to make a request, please fill out the following form :













Contact Us













**For a FREE information packet including treatments, clinical trials, and specialists, please complete the form above or call a Mesothelioma Web coordinator at 1-877-367-6376.

News

Resources

If you would like to receive a FREE information packet or have questions about mesothelioma, call us at:

Toll-Free 1-877-367-6376

 
 
.

.

.

 

Pemetrexed in combination with cisplatin in the treatment of chemonaive patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM)... ] Evidence against a role for SV40 infection in human mesotheliomas and high risk of false-positive PCR results owing to pre... ] Pleural biopsy: a reliable method for determining the diagnosis but not subtype in mesothelioma ] CT scans in Mesothelioma patients for comprehensive treatment with cytoreductive surgery and perioperative intraperitoneal... ] Extended surgical staging for potentially resectable malignant pleural mesothelioma ] Fatal pneumonitis associated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy for mesothelioma. ] Preoperative evaluation of patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma: role of integrated CT-PET imaging. ] Intrapleural immuno-chemotherapy, pleurectomy/decortication, radiotherapy, systemic chemotherapy and long-term sub-cutaneo... ] Two cases of pleural mesothelioma following unusual and unrecognized exposure to asbestos. The role of Occupational Health... ] Genetic predisposition and health effect of occupational exposure to asbestos. ] The economic costs of health service treatments for asbestos-related mesothelioma deaths. ] Early-life family structure and cancer risk. ] ACT Government Changes Asbestos Compensation Laws | Australian Prime Minister Rejects Alimta Subsidy Request ] Alabama Veteran Service Officers ] Alaska Veteran Service Officers ] Phase III Program ofONCONASE for The Treatment of Patients with Unresectable Malignant Mesothelioma ] Alimta ] Mesothelioma Alimta + Cisplatin ] Alimta  Patients with Mesothelioma ] Alimta Added to Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme ] Data Affirm Benefit of Alimta (pemetrexed) ] FDA approves Alimta for Mesothelioma Treatment ] Lilly Given OK To Make Alimta Available on Expanded Access Basis ] FDA Approves Alimta - Cisplatin Combination for Treatment of Asbestos-Related Cancer Mesothelioma ] About the Alimta/Cisplatin chemotherapy regimen for malignant mesothelioma trestment ] Patients hope new mesothelioma drug Alimta receives FDA approval ] FDA Approves Alimta - First Drug for Rare Type of Cancer Mesothelioma ] Alimta Questions and Answers ] Scientist Reveals His Hopes for Better Tumour Treatment ] Alstom Power Boiler liable for exposing workers to asbestos ] Demonstrators Demand Asbestos Inquiry ] Anemia from Chemotherapy ] Angiogenesis and Anti-angiogenesis Drugs for mesothelioma ] Angiogenesis Inhibitors in the Treatment of Mesothelioma ] Clinical trials for anti-angiogenesis inhibitors for mesothelioma ] Bevacizumab (Avastin), endostatin, other antiangiogensis agents in treatment of Mesothelioma ] Anti-angiogenesis 'silver bullet' agents re-aimed at cancer ] Antifolates - class of chemotherapy agents ] Antimetabolites in mesothelioma treatment ] Anti-nausea Treatment During Chemotherapy ] Energy company invites former station employees to free asbestos checks ] Shoppers reassured they were not exposed to asbestos ] Patients See Benefit From Self Reporting Symptoms Online ] Nanoparticles Help Advance Anticancer siRNA Therapy ] Research at MIT Shows microRNA's Protective Role ] Regulators Found Negligent In Collapse of Utah Mine ] UK: Proposed Barrow Development Could be Tainted with Asbestos ] Children's Toys Contaminated by Asbestos ] Two Six Nations Schools Closed Over Asbestos Concerns ] Killeen Set to Demolish Asbestos Laden Building ] City employees become asbestos demolition team ] UK: Residents Against Proposed Asbestos Waste Facility ] Asbestos claims the life of six family members ] Japan's Environmental Ministry accused of not taking asbestos seriously ] Asbestos exposure now a concern for students who survived a fire ] Company’s employees leak illegal asbestos dumping ] Contractor convicted of asbestos felony ] Higher Doses of Chemotherapy Make No Difference in Small Cell Lung Cancer ] Innovative New Cancer Treatment Idea Earns $1 Million Prize ] Disease-Causing Bugs May Help Treat Cancer ] New Cancer Vaccine Approved for Limited Use in Russia ] New Therapy Targets Hepatitis C ] Mesothelioma sufferer receives payout from large manufacturer ] Summit Hill, Pennsylvania to spend money on asbestos removal ] Mesothelioma rates are highest in Britain and Australia ] Former Rice President Appointed to Cancer Research Grant Committee ] UK: Asbestos may affect students' exam performance ] Asbestos prevents Framingham Mass residents from collecting their possessions ] New Study Raises Doubts About Some RNA-Based Drugs ] UK: University of Winchester student lied to about asbestos presence ] Family forced to live in one room because of asbestos ] Brookline Massachusetts residents concerned about asbestos release at a demolition site ] Concerns about anemia medications for cancer patients ] Dopamine for cancer treatment ] Asbestos found on a historic school's campus ] Firefights and building workers exposed to asbestos during renovation work ] UK: Former nurse will die from asbestos ] Cancer drugs from genetically modified chicken eggs ] Figuring out how cancer grows ] EPA draws criticism over vermiculite ] Elderly victim of mesothelioma seeks compensation to provide for his family ] W.R. Grace & Co. will pay $3 billion in settlements ] Arizona Veteran Service Offices ] Arkansas Veteran Service Offices ] Asbestos Diseases That Affect Veterans ] [ Asbestos - Mesothelioma's Cause ] Further EPA Testing at Alviso Superfund Site ] Asbestos Exposure and SeaBees ] Asbestos Exposure and Ovarian Cancer ] Asbestos Pipes Contaminating Water Supply ] Cancer seen in family members of asbestos workers ] Exposure of Military Personnel to Asbestos ] Mesothelioma and Lung Cancer ] Asbestos Patients Younger Than Ever ] ASCO abstracts on mesothelioma research ] Asbestos Mine Poisons Another Australian Town ] Battleships Known to Have Contained Asbestos ] Living with Mesothelioma with Belle McGuckin ] Benign Mesothelioma ] The Patient's Bill of Rights ] Biogen Idec Gene Drug ] Biopsies in the diagnosis of mesothelioma ] Understanding Your Blood Counts ] Mesothelioma Blood Test | Asbestos Cancer Blood Test ] Bloomberg Accepts 9/11 Health Panel's Findings - Mesothelioma Web ] India's Highest Court to Decide Fate of "Blue Lady" ] Boysenberries might impede mesothelioma ] Bracytherapy in mesothelioma treatment ] Novartis Oncology Cancer Clinical Trials ]

High Yield Investing  News ] Nouriel Roubini ] Industry Update ] Asbestos delays the reopening of a pub ] Mesothelioma ] Australia: Asbestos expert gives warning to builders ] P&W SmartBrief ] Harvard Business Publishing. ] Solar Thin Films ships equipment to Grupo Unisolar ]