Effects of sulfuric acid aerosols on pulmonary function of guinea pigs.

Forty-seven Hartley guinea pigs were exposed for 1 h to approximately 1-micrometer (mass median aerodynamic diameter) sulfuric acid aerosols at concentrations that ranged from 1.2 to 48.3 mg/m3. Ten animals (controls) were exposed to filtered room air only. Eight H2SO4-exposed animals exhibited marked increases in total pulmonary resistance and marked decreases in dynamic compliance. Four of these eight "responsive" animals died during exposure. All other H2SO4-exposed animals exhibited no major difference from controls and were termed nonresponsive. The proportion of responsive to nonresponsive animals increased with exposure concentration, but the magnitude of pulmonary function change was similar for all responsive animals regardless of concentration. Compared to nonresponders, responsive animals had higher preexposure values of tidal transpulmonary pressure excursions and total pulmonary resistance and lower values of dynamic compliance. Preexposure transpulmonary pressure excursions were positively correlated with minute volume only for nonresponsive animals; transpulmonary pressure excursions were positively correlated with total pulmonary resistance in responsive animals. The results suggest that the Hartley guinea pig reacts to inhaled H2SO4 with an essentially all-or-none airway constrictive response and that an animal's sensitivity to this response may be related to its preexposure airway caliber.

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