J Electron Microsc (Tokyo)
January 2008
Ozone (O3) is an oxidizing agent that acts on phospholipids, proteins and sugars of cellular membranes producing free radicals, which cause oxidative damages. The O3 exposure has been used as a model to study oxidative stress, in which the respiratory airways represent the entrance to the organism. In this study, ultrastructural alterations were identified at the bronchiolar level during the intra-uterine lung development, using an O3 exposure model in pregnant rats during 18, 20 and 21 days of gestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe prevalence of asthma--a chronic inflammatory respiratory disease--is increasing worldwide. One hypothesis suggests that this trend is related to enhanced exposure to air pollutants. Chronic inflammation generates oxidative stress, and cells involved in an allergic reaction are capable of producing reactive oxygen species that may predispose asthmatics to increased deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The best example of a chronic inflammatory respiratory disease is asthma, a disease which has an increasing prevalence worldwide. This chronic inflammation is also related to the generation of oxidative stress since the cells involved in the allergic reaction are capable of producing reactive oxygen species (ROS), and this might predispose asthmatics to increased genotoxic damage.
Methods: A respiratory symptomatology questionnaire was self-applied by asthmatic and nonasthmatic students.
Vanadium concentrations in lung tissue were determined by atomic absorption spectrometry from autopsy specimens taken from residents of Mexico City during the 1960s and 1990s (20 males and 19 females, and 30 males and 18 females, respectively). Samples from the 1990s had significantly increased mean vanadium concentrations (mean +/- standard deviation: 1.36 +/- 0.
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