PMID: 6169298Sep 1, 1981Paper

Threshold concentration of ozone causing an increase in bronchial reactivity in humans and adaptation with repeated exposures

The American Review of Respiratory Disease
M DimeoH A Boushey

Abstract

To determine the lowest concentration of ozone that causes an increase in bronchial reactivity to histamine and to determine whether adaptation to this effect of ozone develops with repeated exposures, we studied 19 healthy adult subjects. Bronchial reactivity was assessed by measuring the rise in specific airway resistance (delta SRaw) produced by inhalation of 10 breaths of histamine aerosol (1.6% solution). In 5 subjects, bronchial reactivity was determined at 9:00 and 11:30 A.M. on 4 consecutive days without exposure to ozone (Group I). In 7 other subjects (Group II), bronchial reactivity was assessed at 9:00 and 11:30 A.M. on 3 consecutive days, and subjects were exposed to 0.2 ppm of ozone from 9:30 to 11:30 A.M. on the third day. Seven additional subjects (Group III) had bronchial reactivity assessed in a similar fashion for 2 days and then again on 3 consecutive days of 2-h exposures to 0.4 ppm of ozone. Pre-exposure bronchial reactivity of the groups was the same, and no change in bronchial reactivity occurred in the group tested repeatedly but not exposed to ozone. An increase in delta SRaw provoked by histamine was noted after the first exposure to 0.4 ppm but not to 0.2 ppm of ozone (p less than 0.025). With 3 repea...Continue Reading

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