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Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.

Data from exposure of experimental animals and human subjects to sulfuric acid presents a consistent picture of its toxicology. Effects on airway resistance in asthmatic subjects were well predicted by data obtained on guinea pigs. Sulfuric acid increases the irritant response to ozone in both rats...

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Autor principal: Amdur, M O
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1989
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2667973
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author Amdur, M O
author_facet Amdur, M O
author_sort Amdur, M O
collection PubMed
description Data from exposure of experimental animals and human subjects to sulfuric acid presents a consistent picture of its toxicology. Effects on airway resistance in asthmatic subjects were well predicted by data obtained on guinea pigs. Sulfuric acid increases the irritant response to ozone in both rats and man. In donkeys, rabbits, and human subjects, sulfuric acid alters clearance of particles from the lung in a similar manner. These changes resemble those produced by cigarette smoke and could well lead to chronic bronchitis. Data obtained on guinea pigs indicate that very small amounts of sulfuric acid on the surface of ultrafine metal oxide aerosols produce functional, morphological, and biochemical pulmonary effects. Such particles are typical of those emitted from coal combustion and smelting operations. Sulfate is an unsatisfactory surrogate in existing epidemiology studies. Sulfuric acid measurement is a critical need in such studies.
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spelling pubmed-15675352006-09-18 Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new. Amdur, M O Environ Health Perspect Research Article Data from exposure of experimental animals and human subjects to sulfuric acid presents a consistent picture of its toxicology. Effects on airway resistance in asthmatic subjects were well predicted by data obtained on guinea pigs. Sulfuric acid increases the irritant response to ozone in both rats and man. In donkeys, rabbits, and human subjects, sulfuric acid alters clearance of particles from the lung in a similar manner. These changes resemble those produced by cigarette smoke and could well lead to chronic bronchitis. Data obtained on guinea pigs indicate that very small amounts of sulfuric acid on the surface of ultrafine metal oxide aerosols produce functional, morphological, and biochemical pulmonary effects. Such particles are typical of those emitted from coal combustion and smelting operations. Sulfate is an unsatisfactory surrogate in existing epidemiology studies. Sulfuric acid measurement is a critical need in such studies. 1989-05 /pmc/articles/PMC1567535/ /pubmed/2667973 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Amdur, M O
Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
title Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
title_full Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
title_fullStr Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
title_full_unstemmed Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
title_short Health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
title_sort health effects of air pollutants: sulfuric acid, the old and the new.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2667973
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