Unlabelled: Vibroacoustic disease is a pathology caused by long occupational exposure to large pressure amplitude and low frequency noise. It is a systemic disease, with evolvement of respiratory structures. The exposure workers to this noise of textile industry may favour alterations in lung function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccidental inhalation of selenium (Se) derivatives, such as dimethyl selenide (DMSe), has been associated with damage of respiratory tissues. However, systemic effects of inhaled Se have not been thoroughly established. We have investigated whether mouse kidney and liver show cellular pathology as a result of a single intratracheal instillation of two different doses of DMSe (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe kinetics of the acute inflammatory response of the lung was triggered in CD-1 mice by a single intratracheal instillation of a large amount of Se (10 mg); it was studied by quantitative cytology of bronchoalveolar lavage samples, light microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy coupled with x-ray elemental microanalysis. Bronchoalveolar lavage leukocytes were mostly neutrophils and increased from 12 to 24 h of Se treatment and decreased at 72 h. Only less than half of the granulocytes showed ingested Se particles; in contrast, virtually all BAL macrophages contained Se particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCD-1 mice were exposed to a single intratracheal instillation of either 0.025 or 0.075 mg Se/kg wt of dimethyl selenide (DMSe).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicol Ind Health
September 2002
Several heavy metals that are currently employed in industry may become polluters of work and natural environments. As particulate matter, heavy metals are suitable for entering the human body through the respiratory and digestive systems. They often end up inside phagocytes; the size of the microscopic particles modulates both their phagocytosis, and the physiology of macrophages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccidental inhalation of selenium by humans has been associated with damage of respiratory tissues that is lacking a detailed histological definition. We have investigated the natural history of injury to the tracheal epithelium and lungs induced by a single intratracheal instillation of CD-1 mice with two different doses of dimethyl selenide (0.05 and 0.
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