The phthalate and musk compounds load in a sample of apartments and kindergartens were low with a typical distribution pattern in air and household dust, but without a significant correlation between air and dust concentration. The largest source of general population exposure to phthalates is dietary. For certain subsets of the general population non-dietary ingestion (medical and occupational) is important.
In the absence of indoor sources a significant correlation with regard to respirable particulate matter (RPM) and elemental carbon concentrations between the indoor and ambient air of apartments was observed. The high degree of certainty resulting from this correlation underscores the importance of ambient air concentrations for indoor air quality. In nursery schools we found higher concentrations of RPM. An explanation of these results could be the high number of occupants in the room, their activity and the cleaning intensity.
Administration of physiological saline or drugs together with saline into the airways is becoming common clinical practice. However, there are few studies on possible side effects. We have studied the effects of saline, saline plus xanthine oxidase, and saline plus xanthine oxidase plus superoxidase dismutase on lung-thorax compliance and on arterial blood gases in anesthetized, paralyzed guinea pigs, ventilated for 2.5 h. Saline bolus (2–3 ml isotonic saline/kg body weight) into the airways reduced the compliance within 20 min to a mean of 39% of the pretreatment levels, and necessitated an increase in the respirator pressure. Saline plus xanthine oxidase decreased the compliance to 16 % of the pretreatment levels. The xanthine oxidase-induced (but not saline-induced) decrease in lung compliance was relieved by superoxide dismutase. According to the present results xanthine oxidase induces a lung injury possibly by production of free oxygen radicals. Superoxide dismutase can be valuable in prevention of free oxygen radical-mediated lung damage. Saline alone can be harmful when applied to the airways. This should be considered in clinical trials and in clinical practice.
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