Respiratory Responses of Young Asthmatic Volunteers in Controlled Exposures to Sulfuric Acid Aerosol
- 1 August 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Review of Respiratory Disease
- Vol. 142 (2) , 343-348
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/142.2.343
Abstract
Thirty-two asthmatic volunteers 8 to 16 yr of age, recruited through local schools and private physicians, were exposed in a chamber to clean air (control condition) and to sulfuric acid aerosol at a "low" concentration (46 .+-. 11 .mu.g/m3; mean .+-. SD) and at a "high" concentration (127 .+-. 21 .mu.g/m3). Acid aerosois had mass median aerodynamic diameters near 0.5 .mu.m with geometric standard deviations near 1.9. Temperature was 21.degree. C, and relative humidity was near 50%. Subjects were exposed with unencumbered oronasal breathing for 30 min at rest plus 10 min at moderate exercise (ventilation rate = 20 L/min/m2 of body surface). A subgroup (21 subjects) were exposed similarly to clean air and to "high" acid (134 .+-. 20 .mu.g/m3) with 100% oral breathing. Increased symptoms and bronchoconstriction were found after exercise under all exposure conditions. For the group, symptom and lung function responses were not statistically different during control and during acid exposures with unencumbered breathing or with oral breathing. By contrast, other investigators hav reported statistically significant lung function disturbances in groups of young asthmatics exposed similarly with oral breathing. A minority of our subjects showed possibly meaningful excess bronchoconstriction with "high" acid exposure relative to control with both routes of breathing. This could be the result of chance, or it could suggest the existence of an acid-sensitive subpopulation of young asthmatics.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
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