Heterogeneous content of fibres and haematopoesis within the bone marrow may affect diagnosis and staging in chronic myeloproliferative disorders (CMPDs). To evaluate their distribution, we conducted a post mortem histomorphometric study of 22 patients with CMPD in chronic phases. In bone marrow specimens from the anterior and posterior iliac crest (right and left of each), the sternum, the 7th thoracic and the 3rd lumbar vertebra, the argyrophil fibres were counted using the line intersection method and the cellular and fatty bone marrow using the point count method. Statistical analysis was performed by direct comparison of the sites. The distribution of fibres was almost homogeneous in the patients with low fibre content, revealing a random diversity in more advanced stages of marrow fibrosis. 1/22 patient had no fibre increase in one specimen of the iliac crest and overt myelofibrosis in the other sites. 1/22 patient had myelofibrosis in two sites of the iliac crest and no fibre increase in vertebral column and sternum. The bone marrow cellularity was almost homogeneously increased in all patients. Myelofibrosis proved to be a generalised process with heterogeneous grades of severity in different regions of the bone marrow in CMPDs. No topographical bias was found. In contrast to the homogeneous increase of the bone marrow cellularity the topographical heterogeneity of the fibre content may limit the representativity of single bone marrow biopsies in patients with CMPDs.