The potential carcinogenic effect of inhaled automobile exhaust emissions was examined in rodents. Both rats and hamsters were exposed to the emissions from (1) a gasoline engine, (2) a gasoline engine fitted with a three-way catalytic converter, (3) a diesel engine and (4) a diesel engine with part
Deposition and clearance of inhaled diesel exhaust particles in the respiratory tract of fischer rats
✍ Scribed by T. L. Chan; P. S. Lee; W. E. Hering
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 685 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0260-437X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The fate of inhaled diesel particles was determined in male Fischer 344 rats using radioactive tracers of ^131^Ba and ^14^C. Test animals were exposed in a ‘nose‐only’ inhalation chamber for 40–45 min to diluted diesel exhaust generated from diesel engines burning type 2D diesel fuel containing either ^131^Ba labelled barium dodecylbenzene sulfonate or ^14^C labelled n‐hexadecane. Immediately after exposure, the deposition efficiency of inhaled diesel particles in the respiratory tract was determined to be 15 ± 6% by external gamma counting of ^131^Ba and 17 ± 2% by liquid scintillation counting of ^14^C in the lung tissue samples. Elimination of the particles was observed by measuring the ^131^Ba activity in which 40% of the initial deposition was excreted in the feces via the GI tract in 4 days. The long‐term retention was determined with the ^14^C tag in the insoluble ‘core’ of the diesel particles. Two distinct phases of clearance were evident in the experimental data collected up to 105 days. Clearance half‐times of 1 day and 62 days were found for mucociliary and alveolar clearance, respectively. A small fraction of the particles, about 6% of the initial deposition, was found in the mediastinal lymph nodes after 28 days. This demonstrated that the lymphatic system was also involved in the removal of diesel particles from the pulmonary airways.
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Immediately after a 20 min nose only exposure to 51Cr labeled polystyrene latex microspheres (1.4 MMAD, geometric standard deviation = 1.3, 2 micrograms m-3), 23% of the measured radioactivity was within the trachea-lungs of the exposed rats, 37% was within the gastrointestinal tract, 10% was within