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E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function

INTRODUCTION: E-cigarette (EC) and vaping use continue to remain popular amongst teenage and young adult populations, despite several reports of vaping associated lung injury. One of the first compounds that EC aerosols comes into contact within the lungs during a deep inhalation is pulmonary surfac...

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Autores principales: Graham, Emma, McCaig, Lynda, Shui-Kei Lau, Gloria, Tejura, Akash, Cao, Anne, Zuo, Yi Y., Veldhuizen, Ruud
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9645651/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36350850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272475
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author Graham, Emma
McCaig, Lynda
Shui-Kei Lau, Gloria
Tejura, Akash
Cao, Anne
Zuo, Yi Y.
Veldhuizen, Ruud
author_facet Graham, Emma
McCaig, Lynda
Shui-Kei Lau, Gloria
Tejura, Akash
Cao, Anne
Zuo, Yi Y.
Veldhuizen, Ruud
author_sort Graham, Emma
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: E-cigarette (EC) and vaping use continue to remain popular amongst teenage and young adult populations, despite several reports of vaping associated lung injury. One of the first compounds that EC aerosols comes into contact within the lungs during a deep inhalation is pulmonary surfactant. Impairment of surfactant’s critical surface tension reducing activity can contribute to lung dysfunction. Currently, information on how EC aerosols impacts pulmonary surfactant remains limited. We hypothesized that exposure to EC aerosol impairs the surface tension reducing ability of surfactant. METHODS: Bovine Lipid Extract Surfactant (BLES) was used as a model surfactant in a direct exposure syringe system. BLES (2ml) was placed in a syringe (30ml) attached to an EC. The generated aerosol was drawn into the syringe and then expelled, repeated 30 times. Biophysical analysis after exposure was completed using a constrained drop surfactometer (CDS). RESULTS: Minimum surface tensions increased significantly after exposure to the EC aerosol across 20 compression/expansion cycles. Mixing of non-aerosolized e-liquid did not result in significant changes. Variation in device used, addition of nicotine, or temperature of the aerosol had no additional effect. Two e-liquid flavours, menthol and red wedding, had further detrimental effects, resulting in significantly higher surface tension than the vehicle exposed BLES. Menthol exposed BLES has the highest minimum surface tensions across all 20 compression/expansion cycles. Alteration of surfactant properties through interaction with the produced aerosol was observed with a basic e-liquid vehicle, however additional compounds produced by added flavourings appeared to be able to increase inhibition. CONCLUSION: EC aerosols alter surfactant function through increases in minimum surface tension. This impairment may contribute to lung dysfunction and susceptibility to further injury.
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spelling pubmed-96456512022-11-15 E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function Graham, Emma McCaig, Lynda Shui-Kei Lau, Gloria Tejura, Akash Cao, Anne Zuo, Yi Y. Veldhuizen, Ruud PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: E-cigarette (EC) and vaping use continue to remain popular amongst teenage and young adult populations, despite several reports of vaping associated lung injury. One of the first compounds that EC aerosols comes into contact within the lungs during a deep inhalation is pulmonary surfactant. Impairment of surfactant’s critical surface tension reducing activity can contribute to lung dysfunction. Currently, information on how EC aerosols impacts pulmonary surfactant remains limited. We hypothesized that exposure to EC aerosol impairs the surface tension reducing ability of surfactant. METHODS: Bovine Lipid Extract Surfactant (BLES) was used as a model surfactant in a direct exposure syringe system. BLES (2ml) was placed in a syringe (30ml) attached to an EC. The generated aerosol was drawn into the syringe and then expelled, repeated 30 times. Biophysical analysis after exposure was completed using a constrained drop surfactometer (CDS). RESULTS: Minimum surface tensions increased significantly after exposure to the EC aerosol across 20 compression/expansion cycles. Mixing of non-aerosolized e-liquid did not result in significant changes. Variation in device used, addition of nicotine, or temperature of the aerosol had no additional effect. Two e-liquid flavours, menthol and red wedding, had further detrimental effects, resulting in significantly higher surface tension than the vehicle exposed BLES. Menthol exposed BLES has the highest minimum surface tensions across all 20 compression/expansion cycles. Alteration of surfactant properties through interaction with the produced aerosol was observed with a basic e-liquid vehicle, however additional compounds produced by added flavourings appeared to be able to increase inhibition. CONCLUSION: EC aerosols alter surfactant function through increases in minimum surface tension. This impairment may contribute to lung dysfunction and susceptibility to further injury. Public Library of Science 2022-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9645651/ /pubmed/36350850 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272475 Text en © 2022 Graham et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Graham, Emma
McCaig, Lynda
Shui-Kei Lau, Gloria
Tejura, Akash
Cao, Anne
Zuo, Yi Y.
Veldhuizen, Ruud
E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
title E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
title_full E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
title_fullStr E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
title_full_unstemmed E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
title_short E-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
title_sort e-cigarette aerosol exposure of pulmonary surfactant impairs its surface tension reducing function
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9645651/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36350850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272475
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