Batalha Joao R F, Saldiva Paulo H N, Clarke Robert W, Coull Brent A, Stearns Rebecca C, Lawrence Joy, Murthy G G Krishna, Koutrakis Petros, Godleski John J
Department of Pathology, University of São Paulo School of Medicine, Brazil.
Environ Health Perspect. 2002 Dec;110(12):1191-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.021101191.
The objective of this study was to determine whether short-term exposures to concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) alter the morphology of small pulmonary arteries in normal rats and rats with chronic bronchitis (CB). Sprague-Dawley male rats were exposed to CAPs, using the Harvard Ambient Particle Concentrator, or to particle-free air (sham) under identical conditions during 3 consecutive days (5 hr/day) in six experimental sets. CB was induced by exposure to 276 +/- 9 ppm of sulfur dioxide (5 hr/day, 5 days/week, 6 weeks). Physicochemical characterization of CAPs included measurements of particle mass, size distribution, and composition. Rats were sacrificed 24 hr after the last CAPs exposure. Histologic slides were prepared from random sections of lung lobes and coded for blinded analysis. The lumen/wall area (L/W) ratio was determined morphometrically on transverse sections of small pulmonary arteries. When all animal data (normal and CB) were analyzed together, the L/W ratios decreased as concentrations of fine particle mass, silicon, lead, sulfate, elemental carbon, and organic carbon increased. In separate univariate analyses of animal data, the association for sulfate was significant only in normal rats, whereas silicon was significantly associated in both CB and normal rats. In multivariate analyses including all particle factors, the association with silicon remained significant. Our results indicate that short-term CAPs exposures (median, 182.75 micro g/m3; range, 73.50-733.00 micro g/m3) can induce vasoconstriction of small pulmonary arteries in normal and CB rats. This effect was correlated with specific particle components and suggests that the pulmonary vasculature might be an important target for ambient air particle toxicity.
本研究的目的是确定短期暴露于浓缩环境颗粒物(CAPs)是否会改变正常大鼠和患有慢性支气管炎(CB)的大鼠的小肺动脉形态。在六个实验组中,连续三天(每天5小时)使用哈佛环境颗粒物浓缩器将斯普拉格-道利雄性大鼠暴露于CAPs或相同条件下的无颗粒空气(假暴露)中。通过暴露于276±9 ppm的二氧化硫(每天5小时,每周5天,共6周)诱导慢性支气管炎。CAPs的物理化学特性包括颗粒物质量、粒径分布和成分的测量。在最后一次暴露于CAPs后24小时处死大鼠。从肺叶随机切片制备组织学玻片,并进行编码以便进行盲法分析。在小肺动脉的横截面上通过形态计量学确定管腔/壁面积(L/W)比。当对所有动物数据(正常和CB)进行综合分析时,随着细颗粒物质量、硅、铅、硫酸盐、元素碳和有机碳浓度的增加,L/W比降低。在对动物数据进行的单独单变量分析中,硫酸盐的关联仅在正常大鼠中显著,而硅在CB大鼠和正常大鼠中均显著相关。在包括所有颗粒物因素的多变量分析中,与硅的关联仍然显著。我们的结果表明,短期暴露于CAPs(中位数为182.75μg/m3;范围为73.50 - 733.00μg/m3)可诱导正常大鼠和CB大鼠的小肺动脉血管收缩。这种效应与特定的颗粒物成分相关,表明肺血管系统可能是环境空气颗粒物毒性的一个重要靶点。