Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 13
pro vyhledávání: '"Emil Kunz"'
A cohort of 4320 uranium miners in West Bohemia who started work at the mines during 1948 to 1959 and worked there for at least four years were followed up to the end of 1990 to determine cause specific mortality risks in relation to exposures in the
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::4668139d7e441b2ee8ef8a85af975094
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4c9a2791-8c72-4384-88b4-ebc740d0e48d
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4c9a2791-8c72-4384-88b4-ebc740d0e48d
Autor:
Ladislav Tomasek, Emil Kunz, V. Placek, Jan Matzner, Tomáš Müller, Alena Heribanova, Josef Holeček, Ivo Burian
Publikováno v:
International Congress Series. 1225:239-245
Background : Epidemiological evidence of lung cancer risk from radon is based mainly on studies of men working underground in mines, where exposures are relatively high in comparison to indoor exposure. Risk from residential radon can be estimated fr
Autor:
Shu Xiang Yao, Jay H. Lubin, Howard I. Morrison, Richard W. Hornung, Christer Edling, Alistair Woodward, Margot Tirmarche, Emil Kunz, Geoffrey R. Howe, John D. Boice, Jonathan M. Samet, Edward P. Radford, Robert A. Kusiak
Publikováno v:
Health Physics. 69:494-500
Recent models for radon-induced lung cancer assume that at high levels of cumulative exposure, as experienced historically by many underground miners of uranium and other ores, the risk of lung cancer follows an inverse dose-rate (protraction enhance
Autor:
Albrecht M. Kellerer, Josef Sevc, V. Placek, Emil Kunz, D. Chmelevsky, D. Barclay, Ladislav Tomasek
Publikováno v:
Health Physics. 64:355-369
The major Czechoslovak cohort of uranium miners (S-cohort) is surveyed in terms of diagrams illustrating dependences on calendar year, age, and exposure to radon and radon progeny. An analysis of the dose dependence of lung cancer mortality is perfor
Publikováno v:
The Lancet. 341:919-923
Recent observations have suggested that radon in the ambient air may cause cancers at sites other than the lung, but the evidence is indirect. We have studied site-specific cancer mortality in 4320 uranium miners in West Bohemia who have been followe
Autor:
Shu Xiang Yao, Richard W. Hornung, John D. Boice, Jonathan M. Samet, Margot Tirmarche, Jay H. Lubin, Howard I. Morrison, Donald A. Pierce, Emil Kunz, Geoffrey R. Howe, Robert A. Kusiak, Edward P. Radford, Alistair Woodward, Christer Edling
Publikováno v:
Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 87(11)
Background : Radioactive radon is an inert gas that can migrate from soils and rocks and accumulate in enclosed areas, such as homes and underground mines. Studies of miners show that exposure to radon decay products causes lung cancer. Consequently,
Publikováno v:
Health physics. 67(1)
The estimates of lung cancer risk due to the exposure to radon decay products are based on different data sets from underground mining and on different mathematical models that are used to fit the data. Diagrams of the excess relative rate per 100 wo
Autor:
Jay H. Lubin, Ladislav Tomásek, Christer Edling, Richard W. Hornung, Geoffrey Howe, Emil Kunz, Robert A. Kusiak, Howard I. Morrison, Edward P. Radford, Jonathan M. Samet, Margot Tirmarche, Alistair Woodward, Shu Xiang Yao, Ladislav Tomasek
Publikováno v:
Radiation Research. 147:126
Estimating lung cancer mortality from residential radon using data for low exposures of miners
Autor:
Ladislav Tomášek, Sarah C. Darby, Thomas Fearn, Anthony J. Swerdlow, Václav Plaček, Emil Kunz, Ladislav Tomasek, Vaclav Placek
Publikováno v:
Radiation Research. 137:251
Lung cancer mortality in a cohort of 4320 miners first employed during 1948-1959 at the Jáchymov and Horní Slavkov uranium mines in West Bohemia and followed until 1 January 1991 has been studied to gain a greater understanding of the consequences
Publikováno v:
Health Physics. 54:27-46
Results are reported of epidemiological studies in six groups of miners, who work in U mines, Fe mines and shale clay mines. A significant excess of lung cancer was proven in exposure categories below 50 WLM, the first significant excess of lung canc