Black lung

Black lung is a potentially disabling lung disease that afflicts coal miners. The disease, also called coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, is caused by the inhalation of coal dust over a long period. Accumulated coal dust irritates lung tissue and may destroy it. But defense mechanisms in the lungs remove nearly all the dust. Thus, black lung seldom develops in people who have worked in coal mines for less than 10 years.

Physicians diagnose black lung mainly by means of chest X rays. The disease has two main forms, simple and complicated. The simple form affects only small, scattered areas of the lung and generally has no symptoms. The complicated form damages or destroys a large part of the lung. It results from heavy exposure to coal dust, plus an unknown factor, and causes severe chest pain and shortness of breath. Complicated black lung may worsen even if the victim is no longer exposed to coal dust. It may lead to disability and death.

Black lung often occurs in combination with other diseases, such as bronchitis, emphysema, or tuberculosis. There is no treatment for black lung, but the disease can be prevented by minimizing dust inhalation. A United States government program, financed partly by the coal industry, pays benefits to miners disabled by black lung.