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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Volume 157, Number 3, March 1998, 791-795

Air Contamination with Nitric Oxide
Effect on Exhaled Nitric Oxide Response

ANNIE THERMINARIAS, PATRICE FLORE, ANNE FAVRE-JUVIN, MARIE-FRANÇOISE ODDOU, MICHÈLE DELAIRE, and FRANCIS GRIMBERT

Faculté de Médecine de Grenoble, TIMC-PRETA CNRS UMR 5525, Laboratoire de Physiologie et Service de Médecine du Sport, La Tronche, France

This study examines the response of exhaled nitric oxide (NO) concentration (ECNO) and quantity of exhaled NO over time (EVNO) in 10 healthy subjects breathing into five polyethylene bags, one in which synthetic air was free of NO and four in which NO was diluted to concentrations of 20 ± 0.6, 49 ± 0.8, 98 ± 2, and 148 ± 2 ppb, respectively. Each subject was connected to each bag for 10 min at random. Minute ventilation and ECNO were measured continuously, and EVNO was calculated continuously. ECNO and EVNO values were significantly higher for an inhaled NO concentration of 20 ppb than for NO-free air. Above 20 ppb, ECNO and EVNO increased linearly with inhaled NO concentration. It is reasonable to assume that a share of the quantity of inspired NO over time (InspVNO) because of air contamination by pollution is rejected by the ventilatory pathway. Insofar as InspVNO does not affect endogenous production or the metabolic fate of NO in the airway, this share may be estimated as being approximately one third of InspVNO, the remainder being taken by the endogenous pathway. Thus, air contamination by the NO resulting from pollution greatly increases the NO response in exhaled air.




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