Pulmonary Function Responses of Young and Older Adults to Mixtures of O3, NO2 and Pan
- 1 July 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Toxicology and Industrial Health
- Vol. 5 (3) , 505-517
- https://doi.org/10.1177/074823378900500310
Abstract
The pulmonary function of 32 nonsmokers (eight men and eight women, 18–26 years of age; eight men and eight women, 51–76 years of age) was measured before and after two-hour exposures to (1) filtered air (FA), (2) 0.45 ppm ozone (O3), (3) 0.13 ppm peroxyacetyl nitrate + 0.45 ppm O3 (PAN/O3), (4) 0.60 ppm nitrogen dioxide + 0.45 ppm Os (NO2/O3), and (5) 0.13 ppm PAN + 0.60 ppm NO2 + 0.45 ppm O3 (PAN/NO2/O3). Subjects alternated 20-minute periods of rest and exercise (ventilation = 25 L/min). Forced vital capacity (FVC) was measured pre-exposure and five-minutes after each exercise period. Forced expiratory volume in one sec (FEV1.0) and forced expiratory flow between 25 and 75 percent of FVC (FEF25–75%) were calculated from the FVC tests. Data were analyzed by 4-factor analysis of variance (sex, age, time period, exposure). The responses of men and women were similar. FA exposure induced no effects. The young subjects' decrements in FVC, FEV10 and FEF25–75% became significant (P < 0.01) after the second exercise period of the O3, NO2/O3 and PAN/NO2/O3 exposures, while the PAN/O3 decrements were significant (P < 0.01) after the first exercise period. Although PAN/O3 induced significant decrements earlier than the other conditions including O3, the mean pre- to post-exposure decrements for the four conditions including O3 were similar. In contrast, the older subjects had smaller and fewer significant decrements in pulmonary functions. They had significant mean decrements in FVC following the third exercise period of the NO2/O3 and PAN/NO2/O3 exposures, in FEV1.0 after the third exercise period of the PAN/O3 and NO2/O3 exposures, and in FEF25–75% beginning after the second exercise period of the NO2/O3 exposure. The results suggest that older men and women are less responsive to O3 and mixtures of O3, NO2 and PAN than young men and women, and that O3 is responsible for the decrements observed in pulmonary function.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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