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Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.

Many epidemiologic reports associate ambient levels of particulate matter (PM) with human mortality and morbidity, particularly in people with preexisting cardiopulmonary disease (e.g., chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, infection, asthma). Because much ambient PM is derived from combustion sour...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Costa, D L, Dreher, K L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1470172/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9400700
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author Costa, D L
Dreher, K L
author_facet Costa, D L
Dreher, K L
author_sort Costa, D L
collection PubMed
description Many epidemiologic reports associate ambient levels of particulate matter (PM) with human mortality and morbidity, particularly in people with preexisting cardiopulmonary disease (e.g., chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, infection, asthma). Because much ambient PM is derived from combustion sources, we tested the hypothesis that the health effects of PM arise from anthropogenic PM that contains bioavailable transition metals. The PM samples studied derived from three emission sources (two oil and one coal fly ash) and four ambient airsheds (St. Louis, MO; Washington; Dusseldorf, Germany; and Ottawa, Canada). PM was administered to rats by intratracheal instillation in equimass or equimetal doses to address directly the influence of PM mass versus metal content on acute lung injury and inflammation. Our results indicated that the lung dose of bioavailable transition metal, not instilled PM mass, was the primary determinant of the acute inflammatory response for both the combustion source and ambient PM samples. Residual oil fly ash, a combustion PM rich in bioavailable metal, was evaluated in a rat model of cardiopulmonary disease (pulmonary vasculitis/hypertension) to ascertain whether the disease state augmented sensitivity to that PM. Significant mortality and enhanced airway responsiveness were observed. Analysis of the lavaged lung fluids suggested that the milieu of the inflamed lung amplified metal-mediated oxidant chemistry to jeopardize the compromised cardiopulmonary system. We propose that soluble metals from PM mediate the array of PM-associated injuries to the cardiopulmonary system of the healthy and at-risk compromised host.
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spelling pubmed-14701722006-06-01 Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models. Costa, D L Dreher, K L Environ Health Perspect Research Article Many epidemiologic reports associate ambient levels of particulate matter (PM) with human mortality and morbidity, particularly in people with preexisting cardiopulmonary disease (e.g., chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, infection, asthma). Because much ambient PM is derived from combustion sources, we tested the hypothesis that the health effects of PM arise from anthropogenic PM that contains bioavailable transition metals. The PM samples studied derived from three emission sources (two oil and one coal fly ash) and four ambient airsheds (St. Louis, MO; Washington; Dusseldorf, Germany; and Ottawa, Canada). PM was administered to rats by intratracheal instillation in equimass or equimetal doses to address directly the influence of PM mass versus metal content on acute lung injury and inflammation. Our results indicated that the lung dose of bioavailable transition metal, not instilled PM mass, was the primary determinant of the acute inflammatory response for both the combustion source and ambient PM samples. Residual oil fly ash, a combustion PM rich in bioavailable metal, was evaluated in a rat model of cardiopulmonary disease (pulmonary vasculitis/hypertension) to ascertain whether the disease state augmented sensitivity to that PM. Significant mortality and enhanced airway responsiveness were observed. Analysis of the lavaged lung fluids suggested that the milieu of the inflamed lung amplified metal-mediated oxidant chemistry to jeopardize the compromised cardiopulmonary system. We propose that soluble metals from PM mediate the array of PM-associated injuries to the cardiopulmonary system of the healthy and at-risk compromised host. 1997-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1470172/ /pubmed/9400700 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Costa, D L
Dreher, K L
Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
title Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
title_full Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
title_fullStr Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
title_full_unstemmed Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
title_short Bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
title_sort bioavailable transition metals in particulate matter mediate cardiopulmonary injury in healthy and compromised animal models.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1470172/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9400700
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