WEDNESDAY, Sept. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Secondhand smoke appears
to trigger a complex inflammatory response in the lungs, a study in rats
reveals.
The researchers exposed the animals to secondhand smoke five times per
week for two or four months. The exposures occurred in two three-hour
shifts twice a day, separated by a two-hour break.
"This is much like what a human would be exposed to at a bar or
casino," Adelheid Kratzer, an investigator in the pulmonary and critical
care division in the department of medicine at the University of
Colorado-Denver, said in an American Physiological Society news
release.
Two months of exposure to secondhand smoke was enough to cause
significant changes in the rats' lungs, and those changes were even more
notable after four months.
Among the changes the investigators found were:
- Enlargement in the alveolar air space of the lungs, which suggests the
alveolar structure had started to break down, similar to the way it does
in early emphysema. The alveoli are tiny sacs where the oxygen-carbon
dioxide exchange occurs during breathing.
- Increased numbers of white blood cells called macrophages in the
alveolar space, indicating an immune system response.
- Elevated levels of the cytokine interleukin-18, which is produced by
macrophages and is associated with strong inflammatory responses and
tissue destruction.
- Inhibited growth and spread of endothelial cells lining the inside of
small blood vessels of the lungs. A decrease in endothelial cells can
reduce the elasticity of the blood vessel wall and increase its
permeability, which can lead to chronic inflammation that's seen in
patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, such as emphysema
and chronic bronchitis.
The findings, presented at the American Physiological Society
conference held last week in Westminster, Colo., may help efforts to
develop new ways to treat lung damage caused by secondhand smoke, the
researchers said.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about the
health effects of secondhand smoke.
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