Publication | Closed Access
Asbestos bodies in bronchoalveolar lavage.
70
Citations
12
References
1982
Year
AsthmaAsbestos BodiesBal FluidPulmonary PathologyEnvironmental Lung DiseasesOccupational Lung DiseasesRespiratory ToxicologyPulmonary Alveolar ProteinosisPathologyPleural EffusionPleural DiseaseMedicinePleural PlaquesLung CancerPulmonary DiseaseRadiology
Asbestos bodies (AB) were counted in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from 62 patients with suspected asbestos related diseases, 2 patients with known exposure to asbestos but without related disease, and 40 control subjects. BAL fluid contained AB in all patients with obvious exposure (28 of 28), including the 2 without related disease, in most patients with suspected exposure (26 of 28), as well as in 5 of 8 patients without known exposure but with suspicion of asbestos related disease (mesothelioma or pleural plaques). Among the 40 control subjects, the results in 5 were positive but to a low degree (less than 1 AB/ml of fluid). Quantitative analysis correlated with the type of disease: AB counts were higher in patients with interstitial lung disease than in those with benign (p less than 0.02) or malignant (p less than 0.01) pleural disease. Only 9 of 13 patients with mesothelioma had a positive lavage. In conclusion, the finding of AB in BAL fluid correlates with the occupational risk and can disclose unknown exposure better than a questionnaire, but a positive lavage is not a proof of disease. Quantitative differences in AB counts suggest a different pathogenesis for pleural and parenchymal disease.
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