Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA.
J Aerosol Med Pulm Drug Deliv. 2011 Jun;24(3):137-47. doi: 10.1089/jamp.2010.0815. Epub 2011 Mar 1.
Exhaled breath studies suggest that humans exhale fine particles during tidal breathing, but little is known of their physical origin in the respiratory system during health or disease.
Particles generated by 3 healthy and 16 human rhinovirus (HRV)-infected subjects were counted using an optical particle counter with nominal diameter-size bins ranging between 0.3 and 10 μm. Data were collected from HRV-infected subjects during tidal breathing. In addition, data from healthy subjects were collected during coughs, swallows, tidal breathing, and breathing to total lung capacity (TLC) and residual volume (RV). Using general additive models, we graphed exhaled particle concentration versus airflow during exhalation. Exhaled particles were collected from expired air on gelatin filters and analyzed for HRV via quantitative PCR.
HRV-infected subjects exhaled from 0.1 to 7200 particles per liter of exhaled air during tidal breathing (geometric mean = 32 part/L). A small fraction (24%) of subjects exhaled most (81%) of the particles measured and 82% of particles detected were 0.300-0.499 μm. Minute ventilation, maximum airflow during exhalation, and forced expiratory volume 1 second (FEV(1) % predicted) were positively correlated with particle production. No human rhinovirus was detected in exhaled breath samples. Three healthy subjects exhaled less than 100 particles per liter of exhaled air during tidal breathing and increased particle concentrations more with exhalation to RV than with coughing, swallowing, or rapid exhalation.
Submicron particles were detected in the exhaled breath of healthy and HRV-infected subjects. Particle concentrations were correlated with airflow during the first half of exhalation, and peaked at the end of exhalation, indicating both lower and upper airways as particle sources. The effect of breathing maneuver suggested a major contribution from lower airways, probably the result of opening collapsed small airways and alveoli.
呼气研究表明,在潮式呼吸过程中,人体会呼出细颗粒物,但对于健康或患病时这些颗粒物在呼吸系统中的物理起源知之甚少。
使用标称直径尺寸范围在 0.3 至 10 μm 之间的光学粒子计数器对 3 名健康受试者和 16 名人类鼻病毒(HRV)感染受试者产生的颗粒进行计数。数据是从 HRV 感染受试者的潮式呼吸中收集的。此外,还从健康受试者的咳嗽、吞咽、潮式呼吸以及呼吸到肺总量(TLC)和残气量(RV)中收集数据。使用广义加性模型,我们绘制了呼气颗粒浓度与呼气过程中气流的关系。将呼出的颗粒从呼出的空气中收集在明胶滤器上,并通过定量 PCR 分析 HRV。
HRV 感染受试者在潮式呼吸时每升呼出空气中呼出 0.1 至 7200 个颗粒(几何平均值= 32 个/L)。一小部分(24%)受试者呼出了大部分(81%)测量到的颗粒,检测到的 82%的颗粒为 0.300-0.499 μm。分钟通气量、呼气时的最大气流以及用力呼气 1 秒量(FEV(1)%预测值)与颗粒生成呈正相关。在呼出的呼吸样本中未检测到人类鼻病毒。3 名健康受试者在潮式呼吸时每升呼出空气中呼出的颗粒少于 100 个,并且在呼气至 RV 时比咳嗽、吞咽或快速呼气时增加了更多的颗粒浓度。
在健康和 HRV 感染受试者的呼出空气中检测到亚微米颗粒。颗粒浓度与呼气前半段的气流相关,在呼气结束时达到峰值,表明下呼吸道和上呼吸道均为颗粒源。呼吸动作的影响表明下呼吸道的贡献较大,可能是由于开放塌陷的小气道和肺泡所致。