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Pulmonary endocrine cell hyperplasia and papilloma in rats induced by intratracheal injections of extract from particulate air pollutants.

Authors :
Ito T
Ohyama K
Kusano T
Usuda Y
Nozawa A
Hayashi H
Ohji H
Kitamura H
Kanisawa M
Source :
Experimental and toxicologic pathology : official journal of the Gesellschaft fur Toxikologische Pathologie [Exp Toxicol Pathol] 1997 Feb; Vol. 49 (1-2), pp. 65-70.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

We investigated the effect of intratracheal injections of an extract of suspended particulate matter (SPM) obtained from the urban ambient air of Tokyo, upon the development of proliferative lesions of pulmonary endocrine cells (PECs) in the rat. We also examined the modification effects of nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, or both of them on the PEC lesions. Male F344 rats were divided into six experimental groups of 5 animals each. Twenty animals were treated with intratracheal instillations of SPM admixed with carbon once a week for 4 weeks with or without additional gaseous exposure (6 ppm nitrogen dioxide or 4 ppm sulfur dioxide) 16 hrs a day for 11 months. Five animals were given intratracheal injections of carbon suspended in saline and the other five were untreated. The subcardiac lobes of the right lung were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, and embedded in paraffin. PEC hyperplasias and papillomas were counted in 200 serial sections, 4 microns thick. The average incidences of PEC hyperplasia in the untreated animals and in those treated with carbon were 194 and 200/cm3, respectively. The average incidences of PEC hyperplasia in the animals exposed to SPM tar only, SPM tar plus nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide, SPM tar with nitrogen dioxide and SPM tar with sulfur dioxide were 376, 378, 372 and 349/cm3, respectively. These were significantly higher than the levels of the control animals, and additional gaseous stimuli had no effect on the incidence of PEC hyperplasia. Besides PEC hyperplasia, a few PEC papillomas were found in the animals treated with SPM tar, regardless of gaseous exposure, but in the control animals no papilloma was evident. Thus, compounds in airborne particulates are considered to be responsible for the development of PEC hyperplasias and papillomas.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0940-2993
Volume :
49
Issue :
1-2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Experimental and toxicologic pathology : official journal of the Gesellschaft fur Toxikologische Pathologie
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9085076
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0940-2993(97)80066-8