Pulmonary response to threshold levels of sulfur dioxide (1.0 ppm) and ozone (0.3 ppm)
- 1 June 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 58 (6) , 1783-1787
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1985.58.6.1783
Abstract
We exposed 22 healthy adult nonsmoking male subjects for 2 h to filtered air, 1.0 ppm sulfur dioxide (SO2), 0.3 ppm ozone (O3), or the combination of 1.0 ppm SO2 + 0.3 ppm O3. We hypothesized that exposure to near-threshold concentrations of these pollutants would allow us to observe any interaction between the two pollutants that might have been masked by the more obvious response to the higher concentrations of O3 used in previous studies. Each subject alternated 30-min treadmill exercise with 10-min rest periods for the 2 h. The average exercise ventilation measured during the last 5 min of exercise was 38 1/min (BTPS). Forced expiratory maneuvers were performed before exposure and 5 min after each of the three exercise periods. Maximum voluntary ventilation, He dilution functional residual capacity, thoracic gas volume, and airway resistance were measured before and after the exposure. After O3 exposure alone, forced expiratory measurements (FVC, FEV1.0, and FEF25–75%) were significantly decreased. The combined exposure to SO2 + O3 produced similar but smaller decreases in these measures. There were small but significant differences between the O3 and the O3 + SO2 exposure for FVC, FEV1.0, FEV2.0, FEV3.0, and FEF25–75% at the end of the 2-h exposure. We conclude that, with these pollutant concentrations, there is no additive or synergistic effect of the two pollutants on pulmonary function.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preexposure to Low Ozone Concentrations Does Not Diminish the Pulmonary Function Response on Exposure to Higher Ozone Concentrations1–4American Review of Respiratory Disease, 1983
- Human exposure to sulfur dioxide and ozone in a high temperature-humidity environmentAihaj Journal, 1982
- Effects of sulfuric acid aerosol on pulmonary function in human subjects: An environmental chamber studyEnvironmental Research, 1981
- Effects of 0.75ppm Sulfur Dioxide on Pulmonary Function Parameters of Normal Human SubjectsArchives of environmental health, 1981
- Exposures of human volunteers to a controlled atmospheric mixture of ozone, sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acidAihaj Journal, 1981
- ADAPTATION TO OZONE - DURATION OF EFFECTPublished by Elsevier ,1981
- Respiratory Responses in Humans Repeatedly Exposed to Low Concentrations of Ozone1–3American Review of Respiratory Disease, 1980
- Human Exposure to Sulfur Dioxide and Ozone: Absence of a Synergistic EffectArchives of environmental health, 1979
- CONTROLLED EXPOSURES OF HUMAN VOLUNTEERS TO SULFATE AEROSOLS - HEALTH-EFFECTS AND AEROSOL CHARACTERIZATIONPublished by Elsevier ,1979
- EFFECTS OF SULFURIC-ACID AEROSOL ON CARDIOPULMONARY FUNCTION OF DOGS, SHEEP, AND HUMANSPublished by Elsevier ,1978