JP-8 jet fuel exposure results in immediate immunotoxicity, which is cumulative over time

The US Air Force has implemented the widespread use of JP-8 jet fuel in its operations, although a thorough understanding of its potential effects upon exposed personnel is unclear. In the present study, the immediate effects of JP-8 exposure on the immune system were analyzed. Exposure of mice once to a single 1000 mg/m3 concentration of JP-8 for one hour resulted in significant immune organ weight loss and loss of viable immune cells from the spleen within two hours post-exposure. Although a similar exposure had no effect on thymus organ weight, it did result in significant losses of viable immune cells at one hour post-exposure. It was also observed that a loss of viable bone marrow cells could be seen at four hours post-exposure, with a return to baseline levels by 24 hours post-exposure. In terms of peripheral blood immune cells, a significant loss of viable immune cells was observed within one hour post-exposure, which became more pronounced with time. Further, it was observed that a single one-hour JP-8 exposure resulted in an immediate loss of immune function at one hour post-exposure that did not recover within 24 hours. An extension of the above experiments revealed that each additional one hour/day of exposure to 1000 mg/m3 of JP-8 promulgates the significant immunotoxicity described above. That is, spleenic organ weights, as well as viable cell numbers, continued to decline with additional days of short-term exposure. Thymic organ weights were significantly reduced at three to four days of one-hour exposures, with a continuing loss of viable cell numbers. Significantly, functional immune responses continued to deteriorate with each additional day of JP-8 exposure. Thus, low concentration JP-8 jet fuel exposures have significant effects on the immune system, these effects occur rapidly and these effects are cumulative over time.

[1]  D. Deluca,et al.  Phenotypic and functional immaturity of human umbilical cord blood T lymphocytes. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[2]  P. Mindus,et al.  Neuropsychiatric symptoms in workers occupationally exposed to jet fuel — a combined epidemiological and casuistic study , 1983, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica. Supplementum.

[3]  John Pfaff,et al.  Inhalation exposure to jp‐8 jet fuel alters pulmonary function and substance p levels in fischer 344 rats , 1995, Journal of applied toxicology : JAT.

[4]  C L Alden,et al.  A 90-Day Continuous Vapor Inhalation Toxicity Study of JP-8 Jet Fuel Followed by 20 or 21 Months of Recovery in Fischer 344 Rats and C57BL/6 Mice , 1991, Toxicologic pathology.

[5]  H. Chen,et al.  Capsaicin pretreatment before JP-8 jet fuel exposure causes a large increase in airway sensitivity to histamine in rats , 1992, Regulatory Peptides.

[6]  S. Loft,et al.  Jet fuel and liver function. , 1985, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[7]  R. Robledo,et al.  Effects of short-term JP-8 jet fuel exposure on cell-mediated immunity , 2000, Toxicology and industrial health.

[8]  R C Lantz,et al.  Changes in Lung Permeability Correlate With Lung Histology in a Chronic Exposure Model , 1995, Toxicology and industrial health.

[9]  R. Robledo,et al.  Immunotoxicological Effects of Jp-8 Jet Fuel Exposure , 1997, Toxicology and industrial health.

[10]  R. Robledo,et al.  Short-Term Exposure To Jp-8 Jet Fuel Results in Longterm Immunotoxicity , 1997 .