1 Centre for Heart Lung Innovation, St. Paul's Hospital.
2 Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2018 Feb;15(Suppl 1):S18-S25. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201710-809KV.
It is well known that particulate matter suspended in the earth's atmosphere generated by tobacco smoke, automobile exhaust, industrial processes, and forest fires has been identified as a major risk factor for chronic lung disease. Particulate matter can be divided into large, intermediate, and fine particulates. When inhaled, large particulates develop sufficient momentum to leave the flowing stream of inhaled air and deposit by impaction in the nose, mouth, nasopharynx, larynx, trachea, and central bronchi. Intermediate-sized particulates that develop less momentum deposit in the smaller bronchi and larger bronchioles, and the finest particulates that develop the least momentum make it to the distal gas-exchanging tissue, where gas moves solely by diffusion. On the basis of Einstein's classic work on Brownian motion that showed particles suspended in a gas diffuse much more slowly than the gas in which they are suspended, we postulate that the small airways that accommodate the shift from bulk airflow to diffusion become the major site for deposition of fine particles, resulting in a host immune response. Much remains to be learned about the interaction between the deposition of fine particulates and the host immune and tissue responses; the purpose of this review is to examine the hypothesis that the smallest conducting airways and proximal gas-exchanging tissue are the primary sites for the deposition of the finest particulates inhaled into the lungs.
众所周知,悬浮在地球大气中的颗粒物由烟草烟雾、汽车尾气、工业过程和森林火灾产生,已被确定为慢性肺病的主要危险因素。颗粒物可分为大、中、细颗粒物。吸入时,大颗粒物会获得足够的动量,离开吸入空气的流动流,并通过撞击在鼻子、口腔、鼻咽、喉咙、气管和中央支气管中沉积。动量较小的中颗粒物沉积在较小的支气管和较大的细支气管中,动量最小的最细颗粒物则到达远端气体交换组织,在那里气体仅通过扩散移动。基于爱因斯坦关于布朗运动的经典著作,该著作表明悬浮在气体中的颗粒的扩散速度比它们所悬浮的气体慢得多,我们假设容纳从整体气流到扩散的转变的小气道成为细颗粒沉积的主要部位,从而引发宿主免疫反应。关于细颗粒物的沉积与宿主免疫和组织反应之间的相互作用,还有很多需要了解的地方;本综述的目的是检验以下假设,即最小的传导气道和近端气体交换组织是吸入肺部的最细颗粒物的主要沉积部位。