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1 festations, which uniquely characterize this pneumoconiosis.
2 he Nalp3 inflammasome in the pathogenesis of pneumoconiosis.
3 e-response relation for simple coal workers' pneumoconiosis.
4  were found to have radiographic evidence of pneumoconiosis.
5 diseases such as silicosis and coal workers' pneumoconiosis.
6  had classic lesions of simple coal workers' pneumoconiosis.
7                      To evaluate the risk of pneumoconiosis among workers in a Midwestern automotive
8 stantially more radiographs with evidence of pneumoconiosis and classified higher small opacity profu
9 rs in the US National Study of Coal Workers' Pneumoconiosis and its implications on the exposure-resp
10 nce of pleural abnormalities consistent with pneumoconiosis, as determined by consensus of two Nation
11 ilicosis is an ancient and potentially fatal pneumoconiosis caused by exposure to respirable crystall
12 ses are classified as occupational diseases (pneumoconiosis, chemical pneumonitis), hypersensitivity
13 's pneumoconiosis, silicosis, and mixed dust pneumoconiosis), coal miners are at risk for dust-relate
14                       Anthracosis, a form of pneumoconiosis commonly caused by air pollution and othe
15 hat lead to the development of coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP).
16 s for the following lesions of coal workers' pneumoconiosis (CWP): macules, micro- and macronodules (
17                        Silicosis is a lethal pneumoconiosis for which no therapy is available.
18 ur findings suggest that rapidly progressive pneumoconiosis in these miners was associated with expos
19    Recent recognition of rapidly progressive pneumoconiosis in younger miners, mainly in the eastern
20 in selected counties with elevated levels of pneumoconiosis mortality.
21 ers from the National Study of Coal Workers' Pneumoconiosis (NSCWP), researchers examined changes in
22 gistic model fitting of simple coal workers' pneumoconiosis prevalence to the cumulative coal dust ex
23 .38; 95% CI: 1.35, 1.41) and identified more pneumoconiosis (prevalence ratio, 1.22; 95% CI: 1.20, 1.
24             For the independent test cohort, pneumoconiosis screening accuracy was 0.973, with both s
25 e (AI)-based model to assist radiologists in pneumoconiosis screening and staging using chest radiogr
26 al interstitial lung diseases (coal worker's pneumoconiosis, silicosis, and mixed dust pneumoconiosis
27                             The accuracy for pneumoconiosis staging was 0.927, better than that achie
28 wo groups of radiologists in the accuracy of pneumoconiosis staging.
29 ing-based model for screening and staging of pneumoconiosis using man-annotated chest radiographs.
30 or each subject (normal, stage I, II, or III pneumoconiosis) was determined by summarizing the subreg
31 etermine if criteria for rapidly progressive pneumoconiosis were confirmed.
32 or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pneumoconiosis; widely dispersed throughout the Southwes