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Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) is a monthly journal of peer-reviewed research and news on the impact of the environment on human health. EHP is published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and its content is free online. Print issues are available by paid subscription.DISCLAIMER
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Environmental Health Perspectives Volume 111, Number 5, May 2003 Open Access
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Chronic Exposure to High Levels of Particulate Air Pollution and Small Airway Remodeling

Andrew Churg,1 Michael Brauer,2 Maria del Carmen Avila-Casado,3 Teresa I. Fortoul,4 and Joanne L. Wright1

1Department of Pathology and 2School of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; 3Instituto Nacional de Cardiologia Ignacio Chavez, Mexico City, Mexico; 4Department of Cellular and Tissular Biology, Universidad Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico

Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that chronic exposure to high levels of ambient particulate matter (PM) is associated with decreased pulmonary function and the development of chronic airflow obstruction. To investigate the possible role of PM-induced abnormalities in the small airways in these functional changes, we examined histologic sections from the lungs of 20 women from Mexico City, a high PM locale. All subjects were lifelong residents of Mexico City, were never-smokers, never had occupational dust exposure, and never used biomass fuel for cooking. Twenty never-smoking, non-dust-exposed subjects from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, a low PM region, were used as a control. By light microscopy, abnormal small airways with fibrotic walls and excess muscle, many containing visible dust, were present in the Mexico City lungs. Formal grading analysis confirmed the presence of significantly greater amounts of fibrous tissue and muscle in the walls of the airways in the Mexico City compared with the Vancouver lungs. Electron microscopic particle burden measurements on four cases from Mexico City showed that carbonaceous aggregates of ultrafine particles, aggregates likely to be combustion products, were present in the airway mucosa. We conclude that PM penetrates into and is retained in the walls of small airways, and that, even in nonsmokers, long-term exposure to high levels of ambient particulate pollutants is associated with small airway remodeling. This process may produce chronic airflow obstruction. Key words: , , , . Environ Health Perspect 111:714-718 (2003) .


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