Literature DB >> 12049836

Comparison of low doses of aged and freshly fractured silica on pulmonary inflammation and damage in the rat.

Dale W Porter1, Mark Barger, Victor A Robinson, Stephen S Leonard, Douglas Landsittel, Vincent Castranova.   

Abstract

Most previous studies of silica toxicity have used relatively high exposure doses of silica. In this study, male rats received by intratracheal instillation either vehicle, aged or freshly fractured silica at a dose of either 5 microg/rat once a week for 12 weeks (total dose=60 microg) or 20 microg/rat once a week for 12 weeks (total dose=240 microg). One week after the last exposure, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was conducted and markers of pulmonary inflammation, alveolar macrophage (AM) activation and pulmonary damage were examined. For rats exposed to a total of 60 microg silica, both aged and freshly fractured silica increased polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) yield and AM activation above control to a similar degree, but no evidence of pulmonary damage, as measured by BAL fluid lactate dehydrogenase activity or albumin concentration, was detected. For rats exposed to 240 microg silica, aged or freshly fractured silica increased PMN yield and AM activation above control. However, zymosan-stimulated and L-NAME sensitive AM chemiluminescence was greater for rats exposed to freshly fractured silica compared to aged silica. Exposure to 240 microg aged or freshly fractured silica also resulted in pulmonary damage, but the extent of this damage did not differ between the two types of silica. The results suggest that exposure of rats to silica levels far lower than those previously examined can cause pulmonary inflammation. In addition, exposure to freshly fractured silica causes greater generation of reactive oxygen species from AM, measured as AM chemiluminescence, in comparison to aged silica, but there is an apparent threshold below which this difference does not occur.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12049836     DOI: 10.1016/s0300-483x(02)00061-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicology        ISSN: 0300-483X            Impact factor:   4.221


  14 in total

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4.  Granuloma formation induced by low-dose chronic silica inhalation is associated with an anti-apoptotic response in Lewis rats.

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5.  Concept of assessing nanoparticle hazards considering nanoparticle dosemetric and chemical/biological response metrics.

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6.  Role of engineered metal oxide nanoparticle agglomeration in reactive oxygen species generation and cathepsin B release in NLRP3 inflammasome activation and pulmonary toxicity.

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7.  Cell- and isoform-specific increases in arginase expression in acute silica-induced pulmonary inflammation.

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9.  The structure of volcanic cristobalite in relation to its toxicity; relevance for the variable crystalline silica hazard.

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10.  Particulate matter exposure impairs systemic microvascular endothelium-dependent dilation.

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