Abstract
In order to examine the usefulness of intratracheal instillation of nanoparticles for the screening of the harmful effects of nanoparticles, we performed intratracheal instillation studies of nanomaterials on rats using different delivery devices and postures as a basic study. Multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) with a geometric mean length and secondary diameter of 2.16 μm and 752 nm, respectively, were used as the nanomaterials. Male F344 rats were intratracheally exposed to 0.04 or 0.2 mg/rat of MWCNT, were dissected at 1 d and 3 d, and cell analyses of the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) were analyzed. Two delivery devices were used for the intratracheal instillation of the MWCNTs: a gavage needle and a microsprayer aerolizer. Both induced neutrophil influx in the lung at 1 and 3 d, and there were no significant differences in neutrophil inflammation between the two delivery devices. The main distribution of pulmonary inflammation by both delivery devices was in the centrilobular spaces in the lung. Two postures were used: an angle of approximately 45 degrees and a standing posture on a board, both of which also induced pulmonary influx in BALF and pulmonary inflammation mainly in the centrilobular spaces, with no large difference in pulmonary inflammation between the two postures. Taken together, the differences in the delivery devices and postures of the rats in the intratracheal instillation did not affect the acute pulmonary toxicity of the nanomaterials.
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