A comparison of biochemical effects of nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and their combination in mouse lung I Intermittent exposures

Mustafa, MG; Elsayed, NM; Von Dohlen, FM; Hassett, CM; Postlethwait, EM; Quinn, CL; Graham, JA; Gardner, DE

HERO ID

23049

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1984

Language

English

PMID

6710487

HERO ID 23049
In Press No
Year 1984
Title A comparison of biochemical effects of nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and their combination in mouse lung I Intermittent exposures
Authors Mustafa, MG; Elsayed, NM; Von Dohlen, FM; Hassett, CM; Postlethwait, EM; Quinn, CL; Graham, JA; Gardner, DE
Journal Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology
Volume 72
Issue 1
Page Numbers 82-90
Abstract Swiss Webster mice were exposed to either 4.8 ppm (9024 microgram/m3) nitrogen dioxide (NO2), 0.45 ppm (882 microgram/m3) ozone (O3), or their combination intermittently (8 hr daily) for 7 days, and the effects were studied in the lung by a series of physical and biochemical parameters, including lung weight, DNA and protein contents, oxygen consumption, sulfhydryl metabolism, and activities of NADPH generating enzymes. The results show that exposure to NO2 caused relatively smaller changes than O3, and that the effect of each gas alone under the conditions of exposure was not significant for most of the parameters tested. However, when the two gases were combined, the exposure caused changes that were greater and significant. Statistical analysis of the data shows that the effects of combined exposure were more than additive, i.e., they might be synergistic. The observations suggest that intermittent exposure to NO2 or O3 alone at the concentration used may not cause significant alterations in lung metabolism, but when the two gases are combined the alterations may become significant.
Doi 10.1016/0041-008X(84)90251-5
Pmid 6710487
Wosid WOS:A1984RZ90700008
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 72: 82-90.
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
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