Abstract

In the study presented here a stochastic model predicting the deposition of variably shaped asbestos fibers in the human respiratory tract is introduced. Deposition calculations are commonly based on the concept of the aerodynamic diameter. Besides Brownian diffusion, inertial impaction, and sedimentation, also interception representing the capture of particles at the carinal ridges of single airway bifurcations is considered as main deposition mechanism for the computa- tion of regional and local deposition fractions. Concerning total deposition in the human respiratory tract, fibers with a cy- lindrical diameter, termed dp, smaller than 0.1 � m exhibit lower deposition fractions than comparable spheres, whilst fi- bers with dp greater than 0.1 � m show higher deposition fractions than spheres. The fiber aspect ratiohas only an insig- nificant influence on total deposition, i.e. total deposition fractions of fibers with � = 10 and � = 100 differ by 2 to 10 %. Regarding regional deposition, the fiber diameter represents a controlling factor insofar, as fibrous particles with dp = 0.1 � m are preferably deposited in the bronchioles and alveoli, whereas fibers with dp = 10 � m are exclusively accumulated in the extrathoracic region. Only deposition behavior of fibers with dp = 1 � m is more complex, since valuable particle frac- tions deposit in all compartments of the lungs. Local (i.e. generation-by-generation) deposition of fibrous particles is char- acterized by a deposition peak at airway generation 19 in the case of fibers with dp = 0.1 � m. The deposition maximum is subject to a continuous dislocation towards more proximal airway generations with increasing dp. Therefore, particles with dp = 10 � m are chiefly deposited in the first three bronchial airway generations. Differences of fiber deposition between sitting and light-work breathing conditions may be evaluated is insignificant in most cases. Only fibrous particles with dp = 1 � m significantly change their deposition behavior with increasing inhalative flow rate in the way that proximal depo- sition is remarkably enhanced at the cost of bronchiolar and alveolar deposition. In general, any increase of the inhalative flow rate Q causes a successive dislocation of fiber deposition from distal to proximal compartments of the human respi- ratory tract. The results obtained from the theoretical approach lead to the conclusion that thin fibers with variable length tend to deposit in the pulmonary region of the lung, where they represent a remarkable hazard for mesothelioma. Thick fi- bers are preferentially accumulated in the proximal bronchi and therefore may induce bronchial lung cancer (adenocarci- noma).

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