Random Orbital Bob":107zjzfl said:
.....My Father died of lung cancer in 1983 and was a very keen woodworker. However, as I've already said, he smoked all his life and there's no question in my mind that was the primary cause. I often wonder however if the combination of a sticky coating of tar lining the bronchioles made the inhalation of wood dust all the worse. With the usual tiny hairs in the tubes which catch particles and eject them through sneezing or mucus out of action due to the tar he must have been at much greater risk. There was of course zero extraction and he even built a "table saw" out of Dexion framing, an old washing machine motor and a chipboard top. He frequently used elements of chipboard hidden in the carcasses of his projects because of course it was cheap.
When you consider the known respiratory hazards now compared to back then, it's a wonder anybody survived!
Rob, I think your comments about contributing factors get to the root of the problem and the reason it's hard to find definitive information on COPD and wood.
How can you be specific about finite cause when we are passing through a generation that is becoming more aware of the risks but never-the-less have been exposed to some potentially hazardous conditions before the alarms were raised.
For me it's been asbestos-Beryllium Coper oxides- Tric. -Carbon tetc.- Magnatron generated radiation-hydraulic fluids- plating shop chemicals (all of which I remember being flagged and removed or reduced in exposure) our bodies cope with a lot of abuse.
I have worked with folks that have been exposed to terrible conditions/materials during their working life that have got away with it until very late in life, they always relate such experiences when you instruct them to wear PPE, others have succumbed to lung disease including cancer in their 50-60's including members of my own family.
Three instances of Cancer of the lungs I have knowledge of were all heavy smokers, cigarettes-cigars and pipes. One family was convinced that it was due to severe exposure to asbestos dust when a buildings insulated ceiling collapsed another could only see smoking as a cause but the person was always around building refurbishments and plaster dusts etc. as well.