A protocol to detect inorganic fibres in samples of biological tissues by SEM–EDS is proposed. The sample (500 mg in the case
of lung tissue) is digested by NaClO, filtered using a sample holder and fixed onto a SEM stub by clarification. A total of
800 microscopic fields (MF) at 2000× are scanned along 5 parallel strips of the filter preparation at regular intervals for
a total area of 1.85 mm
2, representing 0.7% of the total accessible area. In order to test the method and to show that the investigation of animals
(sentinel animals) instead of human tissues can provide information on the lung burden of inorganic fibres, the data obtained
from a control group I (animals which lived in an environment free of fibre-bearing rocks) consisting of 12 cattle and a test
group II (animals which lived in alpine valleys with serpentine outcrops) consisting of 6 cattle and 6 wild animals are compared.
As expected, group I shows by far a lesser burden than group II. The proposed SEM–EDS method is a first attempt to standardize
SEM–EDS investigations of inorganic particles in biological tissues and is shown to provide results able to significantly
discriminate the lung burden between populations even when subjected to non natural environmental exposure alone.
Key words: Burden of inorganic fibres; inorganic fibres in biological samples; protocol for SEM–EDS investigation; sentinel
animals.