Chloracne in this
herbicide production worker involved almost every follicular orifice on his face and neck with
comedones,
papules and cystlike lesions.
The condition was first described in German industrial workers in 1897 by Siegfried Bettmann,[2] and was initially believed to be caused by exposure to
chlorine (hence the name "chloracne"). It was only in the mid-1950s that chloracne was associated with aromatic hydrocarbons.[3] The substances that may cause chloracne are now collectively known as chloracnegens.
Chloracne normally results from direct skin contact with chloracnegens, although ingestion and
inhalation are also possible causative routes.
Chloracnegens are
fat-soluble, meaning they persist in the body fat for a very long period following exposure. Chloracne is a chronic
inflammatory condition that results from this persistence, in combination with the toxin's chemical properties. It is believed, at least from
rodent models, that the
toxin activates a series of
receptors promoting
macrophage proliferation, inducing
neutrophilia and leading to a generalised inflammatory response in the skin. This process may also be augmented by induction of excess
tumor necrosis factor in the
bloodserum.
The inflammatory processes lead to the formation of
keratinous plugs in skin pores, forming yellowish
cysts and dark
pustules. The associated
pus is usually a color of green approximating that of a tennis ball. The skin lesions occur mainly in the face, but in more severe cases they involve the shoulders and chest, the back, and the abdomen. In advanced cases, the lesions appear also on the arms, neck, thighs, legs, hands and feet.
In some instances, chloracne may not appear for three to four weeks after toxic exposure; however, in other cases—particularly in events of massive exposure—the symptoms may appear within days.[3][4]
Treatment
Once chloracne has been identified, the primary action is to remove the patient and all other individuals from the source of contamination. Further treatment is
symptomatic.
Secondary infections on severe or persistent lesions may need to be treated with oral
antibiotics or
isotretinoin. However, chloracne itself can be highly resistant to any treatment.
The course of the disease is highly variable. In some cases the lesions may disappear within two years or so; however, in other cases the lesions may be effectively permanent (mean duration of lesions in one 1984 study was 26 years, with some workers remaining disfigured over three decades after exposure).[5]
Related conditions
Chloracne is very often seen in combination with
hyperhidrosis (clammy, sweaty skin) and
porphyria cutanea tarda (a skin condition of increased pigmentation, hair coarsening and blistering).
Notable cases
In mid-1960s,
Dow Chemical paid
Dr Albert Kligman $10,000 in conduct the experiments on the toxicity effects of Dioxin (TCDD) on at least 70 prisoners at the
Holmesburg Prison in Philadelphia. No records of the prisoners' identities appear to have been kept and there were no follow-up studies after the testing period. Several of the inmates developed severe cases of chloracne and some developed blisters that, untreated, lasted four to seven months.[6]
In 1949, 226 workers became ill after a container of
herbicide exploded at a
Monsanto Company plant in
Nitro, West Virginia.[7] Many were diagnosed with chloracne; a medical report at the time described "systemic intoxication in the workers involving most major organ systems."[citation needed]
193 cases of chloracne occurred in
Seveso,
Italy, in 1976 following an
industrial accident in which up to a few kilograms of
TCDD were released into the atmosphere.[8]
Thousands of individuals were exposed at
Fort McClellan, Alabama, when a chemical weapons training center and a nearby
Monsanto factory disposed of chemicals into a creek over several decades.[9] Many individuals [quantify] settled out of court, but a class-action suit is still ongoing.[10] Although the incineration of the chemical weapons at Fort McClellan ended in 2011, areas of the base remain closed or off-limits due to the residual contamination.
In 1968, almost 2,000 individuals in northern
Kyūshū, Japan, suffered chloracne, among other symptoms, after chronic exposure to cooking oils contaminated with
PCBs and
PCDFs. The syndrome came to be called Yushō disease or "Rice Oil" disease.
In 1979, a similar case of mass contamination of cooking oil was reported in central
Taiwan. Over 2,000 individuals were affected by what came to be called Yu-Cheng.[11]
Ukrainian President
Viktor Yushchenko suffered from prominent facial chloracne and was diagnosed with dioxin poisoning in late 2004.[12]
^De Marchia B, Ravetzb JR (1999). "Risk management and governance: a post-normal science approach". Futures. 31 (7): 743–57.
doi:
10.1016/S0016-3287(99)00030-0.
^Moses M, Lilis R, Crow KD, et al. (1984). "Health status of workers with past exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin in the manufacture of 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid: comparison of findings with and without chloracne". Am. J. Ind. Med. 5 (3): 161–82.
doi:
10.1002/ajim.4700050303.
PMID6142642.
^Aoki Y (2001). "Polychlorinated biphenyls, polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins, and polychlorinated dibenzofurans as endocrine disrupters--what we have learned from Yusho disease". Environ. Res. 86 (1): 2–11.
Bibcode:
2001ER.....86....2A.
doi:
10.1006/enrs.2001.4244.
PMID11386736.