Publications by authors named "Jeno Major"

Introduction: Environmental exposure to harmful chemicals may produce severe consequences.

Aim: The aim of the authors was to perform geno- and immune-toxicological monitoring in female employees occupationally exposed to cytostatic agents in hospitals and compare the findings to those obtained from controls.

Method: Altogether 642 women working in hospital who were occupationally exposed to cytostatic drugs and 262 control women participated in the study.

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Introduction: The comet assay is a fluorescent microscopic method that is able to detect DNA strand-breaks even in non-proliferative cells in samples with low cell counts.

Aim: The aim of the authors was to measure genotoxic DNA damage and assess oxidative DNA damage caused by occupational exposure in groups exposed to benzene, polycyclic aromatic carbohydrates and styrene at the workplace in order to clarify whether the comet assay can be used as an effect marker tool in genotoxicology monitoring.

Method: In addition to the basic steps of the comet assay, one sample was treated with formamido-pirimidine-DNA-glycolase restriction-enzyme that measures oxidative DNA damage.

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The aim of our study was to investigate the immunotoxicity of occupational cytostatic drug exposure, and to assess the possible effect of confounding factors, such as age and smoking. In this human study, the immunotoxic effect of antineoplastic drugs was investigated among 306 nurses working in oncology chemotherapy units. Results were compared to 98 non-exposed women.

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Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of 37 formaldehyde-exposed women from four pathology departments in Hungary were investigated to collect data on the effects of occupational exposures to formaldehyde and to find a possible relationship between in vivo formaldehyde-induced apoptosis and genotoxic effects. The subjects were divided into two groups: 16 donors exposed to formaldehyde together with various organic solvents, and 21 subjects exposed mainly to formaldehyde. The results were compared with 37 controls (all women) without known occupational exposure.

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In the present study genotoxicological and immunotoxicological follow-up investigations were made on 811 donors including 94 unexposed controls and 717 nurses with various working conditions from different hospitals (The Hungarian Nurse Study). The nurses were exposed to different chemicals: cytostatic drugs, anesthetic, and sterilizing gases, such as ethylene oxide (ETO) and formaldehyde. The measured biomarkers were: clinical laboratory routine tests, completed with genotoxicological (chromosome aberrations [CA], sister chromatid exchange [SCE]), and immune-toxicological monitoring (ratio of lymphocyte subpopulations, lymphocyte activation markers, and leukocyte oxidative burst).

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Statistical data indicate a chronic shortage of work-force due to overwork, ill health state and increased risk of chronic noninfectious diseases in Hungarian health care personnel, which needs investigations in order to decrease the risk. Nurses of oncology units, often exposed to carcinogens when preparing and handling cytostatic drugs, are especially at high risk. In the present publication we report a complex clinical, geno- and immunotoxicology risk assessment of altogether 500 nurses, performed during the last 10 years at various oncology units in Hungary.

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Ten benzene-exposed oil refinery workers were genotoxicologically monitored in an annual follow-up study between 1990 and 2003 and compared with 87 industrial and 26 matched controls. Each of the exposed subjects suffered from several intercurrent non-infectious diseases such as joint, rheumatic, gastric and dental problems, as well as kidney and liver dysfunctions. The structural chromosome aberration (CA) yields of the exposed donors suggested a dose-dependent response to the mean peak benzene concentrations in the ambient air.

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Chemoprevention with chelating agent Humetta for three months was performed, due to anaemia and other haematologic disorders, immunotoxicological alterations and/or increased chromosome aberration rate among galvanisers and goldsmiths occupationally exposed to precious and heavy metals. Twenty-two of altogether 47 subjects took part voluntarily in the chemoprevention, and the rest of the subjects served as untreated controls. Complex clinical laboratory testing including detailed anamneses; genotoxicological and immunotoxicological monitoring were performed before and after administration of chemopreventive agent.

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The aim of our study was to investigate the immunotoxicity of benzene, styrene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon exposure, to establish the correlation between immunological and genotoxicological parameters, and to assess the possible effect of confounding factors such as age and smoking. The immune status of the donors was characterized by measuring the surface antigens of peripheral lymphocytes. The studied antigens were the following: CD3, CD4, CD8, CD14, CD19, CD25, CD38, CD45, CD45RO, CD54, CD56, CD62L, CD71 and HLA-DR.

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