Abstract

Data from a group of 20 subjects with normal baseline pulmonary function, who were exposed for 2 h to a test atmosphere containing a complex mixture of pollutants, have been contrasted with data from two other groups exposed to presumably non-toxic control atmospheres. Group 1 was exposed to clean air, group 2 was exposed to clean air containing sodium chloride aerosol at 270 micrograms m-3, and group 3 was exposed to the complex atmosphere containing sodium chloride (332 micrograms m-3) and zinc ammonium sulfate (23 micrograms m-3) aerosols plus nitrogen dioxide (0.5 ppm) and sulfur dioxide (0.5 ppm). These atmospheres (ranked according to the presumed relative toxicities of the components; clean air = 0, sodium chloride = 1, complex mixture = 2) were contrasted using multiple regression and partial correlation analyses. The effects of exposure to the complex gas-aerosol mixture on forced expiratory performance were not significantly different from those observed in subjects exposed to clean air or to sodium chloride aerosol.

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