Abstract

BackgroundThere is a steadily increasing quantity of silver nanoparticles (AgNP) produced for numerous industrial, medicinal and private purposes, leading to an increased risk of inhalation exposure for both professionals and consumers. Particle inhalation can result in inflammatory and allergic responses, and there are concerns about other negative health effects from either acute or chronic low-dose exposure.ResultsTo study the fate of inhaled AgNP, healthy adult rats were exposed to 1½-hour intra-tracheal inhalations of pristine 105Ag-radiolabeled, 20 nm AgNP aerosols (with mean doses across all rats of each exposure group of deposited NP-mass and NP-number being 13.5 ± 3.6 μg, 7.9 ± 3.2•1011, respectively). At five time-points (0.75 h, 4 h, 24 h, 7d, 28d) post-exposure (p.e.), a complete balance of the [105Ag]AgNP fate and its degradation products were quantified in organs, tissues, carcass, lavage and body fluids, including excretions.Rapid dissolution of [105Ag]Ag-ions from the [105Ag]AgNP surface was apparent together with both fast particulate airway clearance and long-term particulate clearance from the alveolar region to the larynx. The results are compatible with evidence from the literature that the released [105Ag]Ag-ions precipitate rapidly to low-solubility [105Ag]Ag-salts in the ion-rich epithelial lining lung fluid (ELF) and blood. Based on the existing literature, the degradation products rapidly translocate across the air-blood-barrier (ABB) into the blood and are eliminated via the liver and gall-bladder into the small intestine for fecal excretion. The pathway of [105Ag]Ag-salt precipitates was compatible with auxiliary biokinetics studies at 24 h and 7 days after either intravenous injection or intratracheal or oral instillation of [110mAg]AgNO3 solutions in sentinel groups of rats. However, dissolution of [105Ag]Ag-ions appeared not to be complete after a few hours or days but continued over two weeks p.e. This was due to the additional formation of salt layers on the [105Ag]AgNP surface that mediate and prolonge the dissolution process. The concurrent clearance of persistent cores of [105Ag]AgNP and [105Ag]Ag-salt precipitates results in the elimination of a fraction > 0.8 (per ILD) after one week, each particulate Ag-species accounting for about half of this. After 28 days p.e. the cleared fraction rises marginally to 0.94 while 2/3 of the remaining [105Ag]AgNP are retained in the lungs and 1/3 in secondary organs and tissues with an unknown partition of the Ag species involved. However, making use of our previous biokinetics studies of poorly soluble [195Au]AuNP of the same size and under identical experimental and exposure conditions (Kreyling et al., ACS Nano 2018), the kinetics of the ABB-translocation of [105Ag]Ag-salt precipitates was estimated to reach a fractional maximum of 0.12 at day 3 p.e. and became undetectable 16 days p.e. Hence, persistent cores of [105Ag]AgNP were cleared throughout the study period. Urinary [105Ag]Ag excretion is minimal, finally accumulating to 0.016.ConclusionThe biokinetics of inhaled [105Ag]AgNP is relatively complex since the dissolving [105Ag]Ag-ions (a) form salt layers on the [105Ag]AgNP surface which retard dissolution and (b) the [105Ag]Ag-ions released from the [105Ag]AgNP surface form poorly-soluble precipitates of [105Ag]Ag-salts in ELF. Therefore, hardly any [105Ag]Ag-ion clearance occurs from the lungs but instead [105Ag]AgNP and nano-sized precipitated [105Ag]Ag-salt are cleared via the larynx into GIT and, in addition, via blood, liver, gall bladder into GIT with one common excretional pathway via feces out of the body.

Highlights

  • There is a steadily increasing quantity of silver nanoparticles (AgNP) produced for numerous industrial, medicinal and private purposes, leading to an increased risk of inhalation exposure for both professionals and consumers

  • The biokinetics of inhaled [105Ag]AgNP is relatively complex since the dissolving [105Ag]Ag-ions (a) form salt layers on the [105Ag]AgNP surface which retard dissolution and (b) the [105Ag]Ag-ions released from the [105Ag]AgNP surface form poorly-soluble precipitates of [105Ag]Ag-salts in epithelial lining lung fluid (ELF)

  • Properties, Intratracheal inhalation of freshly generated aerosols, Ionic silver released from the NP surface precipitate as low-solubility silver-salt precipitates in body fluids, Prolonged dissolution in body fluids due to low-solubility silver-salt layers on the surface of NP cores, Competing translocation of silver NP cores versus low-solubility silversalt precipitates across the air-blood-barrier, Clearance of low-solubility silver-salt precipitates from to blood via liver and gall bladder into the small intestine, Accumulation in secondary organs and tissues, Minimal urinary excretion of any silver species

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Summary

Introduction

There is a steadily increasing quantity of silver nanoparticles (AgNP) produced for numerous industrial, medicinal and private purposes, leading to an increased risk of inhalation exposure for both professionals and consumers. Silver nanoparticles (AgNP) are the most frequently used nanomaterial due to their antimicrobial, cytotoxic and electrical properties. Silver nanoparticles (AgNP) have been used extensively (a) in electronic products (b) as antimicrobial and anti-bacterial agents used in wound dressings, sprays, textiles, and medical devices, (c) in food storage and food packaging, (d) as textile coatings and (e) in a number of environmental applications [1,2,3] such as water treatment [4]. Overall 25% of the above-mentioned products apply or contain nanomaterials in a possibly inhalable way for example as sprays [1], which deserves special attention since AgNP may penetrate the air-blood barrier (ABB) and even subsequent barriers such as the placental barrier [6]

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