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Ultrastructural study of the effect of air pollution by SO2 on the respiratory air-ways


IL Abdalla

Abstract



Sulfur dioxide (SO2) has been associated with excessive mortality during air pollution disasters such as that which occurred in Meuse Valley, Belgium in 1930, Donora
Pennsylvania, in 1948 and London in 1952. The SO2 particulate complex results chiefly from
the burning of fossil fuels. Exposure can cause irritant and toxic effects on the human
airways and result in broncho- constriction. It also can aggravate existing pulmonary or
cardiac problems. A positive interaction between particles and SO2 to produce morphologic
changes in airways has been suggested by smog incidents, but has not been evaluated by
experiments. So, this study was done to answer the following questions: (1) What
morphologic changes are produced by repeated injury to airway epithelial cells by SO2? (2)
What is the time course of these morphologic features? (3) Can a model of acute bronchitis
be created which is not due to infection? Ultrastructural changes occurring in the epithelial
cells lining the airways of the experimental rats were studied. A sequence of epithelial
changes was seen with exposure to 100, 200 or 400 p.p.m. for up to 4 weeks. For example:
loss of cilia, vacuolation, pyknosis, goblet cell hyperplasia and the development of stratified
squamous epithelium after 2 to 7 days at 200 p.p.m Higher doses (400 p.p.m.) produced
squamous cell metaplasia after 2 weeks. Exposure to 40 p.p.m. SO2 alone for 4 hours per day for 6 weeks produced no changes, but 24 hours after a 4 hours exposure to 40 p.p.m. SO2 plus 0.74 gm of carbon dust per cu.m. of air, neutrophils were recruited into airway
epithelium. It is suggested that this synergistic effect is due to the carbon particles adsorbing SO2, which leaches off slowly, perhaps within macrophages, to recruit Leucocytes in airways.

African Journal of Health Sciences Vol. 14 (3-4) 2007: pp. 129-136

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eISSN: 1022-9272