ABSTRACT
Intracytoplasmic leukovirus-like bodies were found in the cells and culture medium of a T-cell lymphoblast line established from a leukaemic patient. When the cells were lethally irradiated and added to normal bone-marrow cells the latter were transformed into continuous replication and produced the same types of virus-like particle.
Subject(s)
Bone Marrow/pathology , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/pathology , Cell Transformation, Viral , Leukemia, Monocytic, Acute/pathology , Retroviridae/isolation & purification , T-Lymphocytes/pathology , Adult , Cell Division , Cell Line , Female , Golgi Apparatus/microbiology , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Inclusion Bodies, Viral , Leukemia, Monocytic, Acute/transmission , Male , Microscopy, Electron , Middle Aged , Radiation Dosage , Staining and Labeling , T-Lymphocytes/radiation effectsABSTRACT
45 adults with acute leukaemia or chronic myeloid leukaemia and a control group of patients from the same hospital were asked about the people they had close social contact with before their illness, and about their use of drugs and chemicals. 18 (40%) leukaemia and 6 (13%) control patients had close social contact with hospital personnel or leukaemia patients. 8 (18%) leukaemia patients, but no control patients, had been in close contact with haemotological ward personnel. These differences were statistically significant. 9 (20%) leukaemia and 4 (9%) control patients lived in the same house as healthy persons working in a hospital. No conclusion could be drawn from differences between the two groups in their use of drugs, since the possibility that they were used to treat initial symptoms of leukaemia could not be excluded. Exposure to chemicals, including weed-killers and agricultural insecticides containing a benzene-ring known to be leukaemogenic, was about the same in the two groups.