Science Inventory

EVALUATING THE TOXICITY OF URBAN PATTERNS OF OXIDANT GASES. 2. EFFECTS IN MICE FROM CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO NITROGEN DIOXIDE

Citation:

Miller, F., J. Graham, J. Raub, J. Illing, AND M. Menache. EVALUATING THE TOXICITY OF URBAN PATTERNS OF OXIDANT GASES. 2. EFFECTS IN MICE FROM CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO NITROGEN DIOXIDE. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-87/097 (NTIS PB88139969).

Description:

The study reported herein evaluates the influence of a chronic exposure to an urban pattern of NO2 (continuous baseline exposure of 0.2 ppm on which were superimposed two 1-hr spikes of 0.8 ppm NO2, 5 days/wk) as compared to the baseline exposure to determine the contribution of the spikes to toxicity. Mice were exposed for up to 52 wk with interim examinations. Multivariate analysis of variance revealed a statistically significant treatment effect on infectivity (p=0.05) and pulmonary function (p=0.03) parameters. Infectivity mortality of mice in the spiked exposure regimen was significantly greater than that in either the NO2-background exposed mice or in control mice. Four of the pulmonary function variables exhibited the greatest differences among the treatment groups: end expiratory volume, vital capacity, respiratory system compliance, and multiple-breath nitrogen washout. Results from the pulmonary function analyses indicate that the spiked exposures to 0.8 ppm NO2 may have induced a subtle lesion. The chronic study results indicate that the presence of spikes of NO2 is contributing significantly to effects on antibacterial lung defenses and pulmonary function of mice.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/16/2004
Record ID: 49652