[Clinical evaluation of benign asbestos pleurisy].

Nihon Kokyuki Gakkai Zasshi

Department of Internal Medicine, Okayama Rousai Hospital, Japan.

Published: January 1998

Seventeen cases of benign asbestos pleurisy were evaluated clinically. All cases were male and almost all cases were more than 60 years-old. Most cases presented with chief complaints of chest pain and dyspnea, but 2 cases had no complaints. Pleural effusion appeared predominantly in the right side. Six cases had 2 or 3 episodes of pleural effusion, and 1 case had 5. Ten cases had an occupational history of asbestos exposure in shipyards and 5 other cases had a history in building construction. Almost all cases had more than 30 years of exposure to asbestos and benign asbestos pleurisy appeared after more than 30 years from the first exposure to asbestos. Among the patients, 6 cases had diffuse pleural thickening and 2 cases had malignancies. Pleural fluid was bloody in 14 of 17 cases (82%) and all pleural fluid showed an exudate. Lymphocytes represented 70% and eosinophils 15% of the cellular population of the pleural fluid. Hyaluronic acid in pleural fluid in cases of benign asbestos pleurisy averaged 29.5 micrograms/ml, which was significantly (p < 0.05) lower than in malignant pleural mesothelioma. Leukocytosis in peripheral blood and a high CRP value were uncommon in benign asbestos pleurisy.

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