Brown R E, Brain J D, Wang N
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 1997 Feb;105(2):188-200. doi: 10.1289/ehp.97105188.
There are many distinct differences (morphologic, physiologic, and mechanical) between the bird's lung-air-sac respiratory system and the mammalian bronchoalveolar lung. In this paper, we review the physiology of the avian respiratory system with attention to those mechanisms that may lead to significantly different results, relative to those in mammals, following exposure to toxic gases and airborne particulates. We suggest that these differences can be productively exploited to further our understanding of the basic mechanisms of inhalant toxicology (gases and particulates). The large mass-specific gas uptake by the avian respiratory system, at rest and especially during exercise, could be exploited as a sensitive monitor of air quality. Birds have much to offer in our understanding of respiratory toxicology, but that expectation can only be realized by investigating, in a wide variety of avian taxa, the pathophysiologic interactions of a broad range of inhaled toxicants on the bird's unique respiratory system.
鸟类的肺-气囊呼吸系统与哺乳动物的支气管肺泡肺之间存在许多明显的差异(形态学、生理学和力学方面)。在本文中,我们回顾了鸟类呼吸系统的生理学,重点关注那些在接触有毒气体和空气传播颗粒物后,相对于哺乳动物可能导致显著不同结果的机制。我们认为,这些差异可以有效地用于增进我们对吸入性毒理学(气体和颗粒物)基本机制的理解。鸟类呼吸系统在静息时,尤其是在运动时具有大量的质量比气体摄取量,可作为空气质量的敏感监测指标。在我们对呼吸毒理学的理解方面,鸟类有很多可提供的信息,但只有通过研究多种鸟类分类群中广泛的吸入性毒物对鸟类独特呼吸系统的病理生理相互作用,才能实现这一期望。