Cellulose after a single intratracheal dose (15 mg per animal) brought about fibrosing granulomatous alveobronchiolitis and an increase of IgA production in the bronchoalveolar lavage. Fibrosing alveolitis showed moderate progression as a function of time. With different morphological methods, injury of type I pneumocytes and the incomplete repair of type II pneumocytes were detected. The damage of the alveolar epithelium initiated and activated a series of processes that led to definite pulmonary alterations: pulmonary fibrosis leading to the disintegration of the alveolo‐capillary morphological functional unit.
Our experiments suggest that in the development of plant dust-induced fibrosing alveobronchiolitis--Scadding's fibrosing alveolitis--the cellulose content of plant dusts has a decisive aetiological role. Namely, the wood dust (pine) and the cellulose induced morphologically identical granulomatous inflammation and fibrosis, whereas the fibre-free extract of wood dust did not cause pathological changes in the lungs. The induction of H2O2 and superoxide anion production, shown in vitro in leucocytes, probably has an important role in the development of fibrosis.
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