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Acute myelogenous leukemia picture

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High Risk Jobs / Benzene Exposure

A risk factor is anything that increases a person's chance of getting a disease such as cancer. Environmental risk factors include benzene, smoking cigarettes, and prior exposure to chemotherapy drugs.

Benzene Exposure and Acute Myelogenous Leukemia

Exposure in the work place to benzene use may cause Acute myelogenous leukemia. While benzene has been banned in the United States for over 20 years, workers are still exposed to significant amounts of benzene poisoning when working with petroleum products. Most workers come into contact with benzene by breathing it into their lungs or absorbing it through their skin when working with solvents. In the U.S. millions of workers are exposed to significant amounts of benzene every year. Even small amounts of exposure to benzene can cause Acute myelogenous leukemia cancer.

AML High Risk Jobs include:

Adhesive production
Barge Workers
Chemical Workers
Dock Workers
Gasoline distribution workers
Industrial plant workers who use solvents
Newspaper Press Workers
Offshore Workers
Painters
Paper and Pulp
Pesticide Manufacturing
Pipefittlers
Printers
Refinery Workers
Rubber Workers
Shoe / Leather workers
Synthetic Rubber Production
Tankermen
Truck Drivers

At Risk Benzene Exposure:

Benzene production workers include anyone who works around the following:

· Automotive gasoline Fumes
· Industrial Solvents
· Oil and Coal Emissions
· Paint

AML and Cigarettes:

Although many people know that smoking is responsible for most cancers of the lungs, mouth, throat, and larynx, few realize that it can affect cells that do not come into direct contact with smoke. Cancer-causing substances in tobacco smoke are absorbed by the lungs and spread through the bloodstream damaging normal cells and causing AML leukemia.

Prior Exposure to Chemotherapy Drugs

Patients with other cancers who are treated with certain chemotherapy drugs are more likely to develop AML. The drugs most often associated with these secondary (post-treatment) leukemias include mechlorethamine, procarbazine, chlorambucil, etoposide, teniposide and to a lesser degree, cyclophosphamide.

Combining these drugs with radiation therapy further increases the risk. Most secondary leukemias are cases of AML and occur within 9 years after treatment of Hodgkin's disease, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, or childhood ALL. Secondary leukemias sometimes occur following treatment of breast, ovarian, or other cancers. Chemotherapy does not work as well for patients with secondary Acute myelogenous leukemia.


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