Silicosis was produced experimentally in rats by single intratracheal injections of various doses of SiO2 dust. The weight of the lungs as well as the contents of total nitrogen, collagen, nucleic acids (especially RNA), and lipids increased in accordance with the dose and the time interval. Fibrogenic stimulation in vitro was shown by the supernatant of the homogenized lung in the incorporation of proline into incubated granulation tissue or lung fibroblasts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRelying on in vitro production of the macrophage fibrogenic factor, an attempt was made to quantitate the fibrogenicity of mineral particles. Having determined the optimal conditions by means of quartz, two series of experiments were conducted with respirable coal mine dusts; the first employed artificial mixtures of a mine dust, having a low natural quartz content, with various proportions of quartz, and the second native dusts from European mines. The fibrogenic responses in both series suggest that dust concentration is more important than its composition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Health Perspect
September 1983
A hypothesis is presented for the action of silica-treated macrophages on protein synthesis in fibroblasts and also a method for the isolation of silica-attached materials in lung tissue. The increased protein synthesis in the fibroblasts is due, at least partly, to an increase in mRNA. Silica prevents the suppressing "macrophage effect" of macrophage-originated ribonuclease on fibroblasts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRats were treated for 3-4 months with ethanol or carbon tetrachloride or kept on a high fat-low protein diet. The cell distribution of the liver was investigated with special emphasis on the Kupffer cells with reference to lipids and collagen. Lipids were increased both histologically and chemically in all groups treated.
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