Abstract

Six healthy nonsmoking males inhaled 4-micron diameter Teflon particles labeled with chromium-51. Lung retention was measured for approximately 300 days. Three subjects inhaled "high-leaching" particles and three "low-leaching" particles. The high-leaching leaching particles leached 0.26%/day in water at 37 degrees C for the first 100 days and the low-leaching particles 0.065%/day. On an average, urine sampled for 24 h contained 0.13% of the lung burden for the high-leaching particles and 0.02% for the low-leaching particles. Thirty percent of the long-term clearance occurred with a fast phase, with half-times ranging from 4.5-45 days, and 70% with a slow phase, with half-times ranging from 200-2500 days. The fast phase was similar for the high-leaching and low-leaching groups. The slow phase varied widely among the subjects. There was no clear-cut relationship between half-time and type of particle. However, it seems probable that the slow phase was dependent on the degree of leaching, i.e., the half-times for elimination of intact particles from the lung are even slower. The large differences in long-term clearance among subjects indicate that long-term exposure to highly insoluble particles will result in large differences in lung burden. Subjects with a low capacity to eliminate alveolarly deposited particles are thus expected to be more susceptible to diseases in the alveolar part of the lung, i.e., diseases caused by certain insoluble particles.

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