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Impaired chemotactic responses of bronchoalveolar leukocytes in experimental pneumocniosis

✍ Scribed by Dr K. Donaldson; G. M. Brown; D. M. Brown; J. Slight; M. D. Robertson; J. M. G. Davis


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
621 KB
Volume
160
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3417

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Rats were exposed to clouds of the following pneumoconiotic dusts: quartz, coal‐mine dust, and chrysotile asbestos at l0 or 50mg/m^3^ for 8, 32, and 75 days; for comparison, rats were also exposed to the non‐pathogenic dust titanium dioxide (TiO~2~). The bronchoalveolar leukocytes (macrophages and neutrophils) from dust‐exposed and control rats were obtained by lavage and tested for their ability to migrate toward zymosan‐activated serum. Varying amounts of neutrophils were present depending on the ability of the dust to cause inflammation and the length of exposure. There was a marked loss of chemotactic ability in leukocytes from rats inhaling the pneumoconiotic dusts compared with controls; TiO~2~‐exposed leukocytes had some impairment of chemotaxis, but this was substantially less than that found with the pneumoconiotic dusts. The loss of chemotactic activity did not correlate with the percentage of neutrophils in the lavage cells except when there were very high levels of neutrophils, and there was substantial impairment of chemotaxis with negligible numbers of neutrophils, showing that macrophage chemotaxis was impaired. A phagocytic burden within the leucocytes was not sufficient alone to inhibit chemotaxis, nor was the loss of chemotaclic activity due to occupied receptors, since incubation failed lo restore chemotaxis. Loss to chemotactic activity by leukocytes from pneumoconiotic dust‐exposed lung could be an important factor in the development of pneumoconiosis.


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