Literature DB >> 21386180

Responses measured in the exhaled breath of human volunteers acutely exposed to ozone and diesel exhaust.

K Sawyer1, J M Samet, A J Ghio, J D Pleil, M C Madden.   

Abstract

Exhaled breath collection is used to identify and monitor inflammatory or oxidative components in breath. Exhaled breath sample collection is noninvasive and would greatly benefit human pollutant exposure research. We demonstrate the efficacy of exhaled breath collection and analysis in two human exposure studies to ozone (O(3)) and diesel exhaust, respectively. O(3) study: we collected exhaled breath (gas phase) from healthy human volunteers (age 18-35 years, 12 subjects) immediately before and after exposure to filtered air or 0.4 ppm O(3) for 2 h with and without intermittent exercise. Six subjects received antioxidant supplementation for 2 weeks before their O(3) exposure, while the remaining six subjects received placebo treatments. We demonstrate increased amounts of non-polar carbonyls exhaled immediately post O(3) exposure. The O(3)-induced increase in exhaled carbonyl concentrations was attenuated in the group receiving antioxidants. Our data demonstrate that exhaled exposure biomarkers can be measured in the breath gas phase in humans exposed to O(3). Diesel study: we collected exhaled breath condensate (EBC; liquid phase) from healthy human volunteers (age 18-40 years; 10 subjects) immediately before, immediately after and 20 h post filtered air or diesel exhaust (106 ± 9 µg m(-3)) exposure. Clean air and diesel exposures were separated by 3 weeks to 6 months. We obtained reproducible intra-subject EBC volumes and total protein concentrations across our six collection time points. Diesel exposure did not affect either EBC volume or total protein concentrations. Our data demonstrated EBC volume and total protein reproducibility over several months. Volume and total protein concentration may serve as normalizing factors for other EBC constituents.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 21386180     DOI: 10.1088/1752-7155/2/3/037019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Breath Res        ISSN: 1752-7155            Impact factor:   3.262


  5 in total

1.  Diesel exhaust exposure and nasal response to attenuated influenza in normal and allergic volunteers.

Authors:  Terry L Noah; Haibo Zhou; Hongtao Zhang; Katie Horvath; Carole Robinette; Matthew Kesic; Megan Meyer; David Diaz-Sanchez; Ilona Jaspers
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2011-10-27       Impact factor: 21.405

Review 2.  Noninvasive effects measurements for air pollution human studies: methods, analysis, and implications.

Authors:  Jaime Mirowsky; Terry Gordon
Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol       Date:  2015-01-21       Impact factor: 5.563

Review 3.  Controlled human exposure to diesel exhaust: a method for understanding health effects of traffic-related air pollution.

Authors:  Erin Long; Carley Schwartz; Christopher Carlsten
Journal:  Part Fibre Toxicol       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 9.400

Review 4.  Controlled human exposure to diesel exhaust: results illuminate health effects of traffic-related air pollution and inform future directions.

Authors:  Erin Long; Christopher Carlsten
Journal:  Part Fibre Toxicol       Date:  2022-02-09       Impact factor: 9.400

5.  Variability in bioreactivity linked to changes in size and zeta potential of diesel exhaust particles in human immune cells.

Authors:  Srijata Sarkar; Lin Zhang; Prasad Subramaniam; Ki-Bum Lee; Eric Garfunkel; Pamela A Ohman Strickland; Gediminas Mainelis; Paul J Lioy; Teresa D Tetley; Kian Fan Chung; Junfeng Zhang; Mary Ryan; Alex Porter; Stephan Schwander
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-05-13       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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