Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 150, No. 2, 08 1994, 431-440.
Effects of prolonged, repeated exposure to ozone, sulfuric acid, and their combination in healthy and asthmatic volunteers
WS Linn, DA Shamoo, KR Anderson, RC Peng, EL Avol and JD Hackney
Environmental Health Service, Rancho Los Amigos Medical Center, Downey, California 90242.
To evaluate effects of "acid summer haze" on individuals who exercise
extensively outdoors, we exposed 45 adult volunteers (15 normal or atopic,
30 asthmatic) in a chamber to a mixture of 0.12 ppm ozone (O3) and
approximately 100 micrograms/m3 of respirable sulfuric acid aerosol
(H2SO4). On separate occasions we exposed the same subjects to O3 alone, to
H2SO4 alone, and to clean air. In exposures involving H2SO4, excess acid
was generated to consume ammonia released by the subjects, and the aerosol
therefore contained ammonium salts in addition to H2SO4. Subjects were
exposed to each atmosphere on two successive days, for 6.5 h/d, with six
50-min exercise periods at ventilation rates averaging 29 L/min. Exposures
were conducted during four successive weeks, in random order. Lung function
and symptoms were measured before exposure and hourly during exposure.
Bronchial reactivity to inhaled methacholine was measured just after the
end of each exposure. Exposure to H2SO4 alone caused no significant changes
in lung function, symptoms, or bronchial reactivity relative to clean air.
Exposure to O3 alone or O3 + H2SO4 caused a progressive, statistically
significant (p < 0.05) decline in forced expiratory function, smaller on
the second day than the first, as previously found by others for O3
exposure. Bronchial reactivity increased significantly after exposure to O3
with or without H2SO4. Changes in mean lung function and bronchial
reactivity with O3 + H2SO4 exposure were modestly larger than changes with
O3 exposure, but the differences were nonsignificant or marginally
significant. A minority of individual asthmatic and nonasthmatic subjects
showed substantially greater declines in function with exposure to O3 +
H2SO4 relative to O3 alone. Repeat exposure studies of these subjects again
showed an excess response to O3 + H2SO4 on the average, but there was no
significant correlation between the excess responses of individual subjects
in the original and repeat studies. We conclude that for typical healthy or
asthmatic adults heavily exposed to acid summer haze, O3 is more important
than H2SO4 as a cause of short-term respiratory irritant effects.
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Copyright © 1994 American Thoracic Society
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