Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10909696 | Leukemia Research | 2005 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Hematotoxicity following chronic benzene exposure has been recognized for over a century, although the mechanism remains unknown. We describe a novel form of bone marrow dysplasia in 23 workers exposed to high concentrations of benzene. Distinguishing features of benzene-induced dysplasia include: marked dyserythropoiesis, eosinophilic dysplasia and abnormal cytoplasmic granulation of neutrophilic precursors. Hematophagocytosis, stromal degeneration and bone marrow hypoplasia are also seen. Severe bone marrow dysplasia is frequently accompanied by clonal T cell expansion and alterations in T lymphocyte subsets. No clonal cytogenetic abnormalities were observed. These results suggest that autoimmune-mediated bone marrow injury is an early or predisposing event in the pathogenesis of benzene-induced persistent hematopoietic disease.
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Authors
Richard D. Irons, Ling Lv, Sherilyn A. Gross, Xibiao Ye, Liming Bao, Xiao Qin Wang, John Ryder, Thomas W. Armstrong, Yimei Zhou, Lizhaung Miao, Anh T. Le, Patrick J. Kerzic, Weimin Ni, Hua Fu,