Canines as Sentinel Species for Assessing Chronic Exposures to Air Pollutants: Part 1. Respiratory Pathology

2001 
A complex mixture of air pollutants is present in the ambient air in urban areas. People, animals, and vegetation are chronically and sequentially exposed to outdoor pollutants. The objective of this first of 2 studies is to evaluate by light and electron microscopy the lungs of Mexico City dogs and compare the results to those of 3 less polluted cities in Mexico. One hundred fifty-two clinically healthy stray mongrel dogs (91 males/61 females), including 43 dogs from 3 less polluted cities, and 109 from southwest and northeast metropolitian Mexico City (SWMMC, NEMMC) were studied. Lungs of dogs living in Mexico City and Cuernavaca exhibited patchy chronic mononuclear cell infiltrates along with macrophages loaded with particulate matter (PM) surrounding the bronchiolar walls and extending into adjacent vascular struc- tures; bronchiolar epithelial and smooth muscle hyperplasia, peri- bronchiolar fibrosis, microthrombi, and capillary and venule poly- morphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) margination. Ultrafine PM was seen in alveolar type I and II cells, endothelial cells, interstitial macrophages (Mu), and intravascular Mu-like cells. Bronchoal- veolar lavage showed significant numbers of alveolar macrophages undergoing proliferation. Exposure to complex mixtures of pollut- ants—predominantly particulate matter and ozone—is causing lung structural changes induced by the sustained inflammatory process and resulting in airway and vascular remodeling and altered repair. Cytokines released from both, circulating inflammatory and resident lung cells in response to endothelial and epithelial injury may be playing a role in the pathology described here. Deep concern exists for
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