Mount Sakurajima in the south of the Kyushu Island of Japan erupts hundreds of times a year and continuously emits large amounts of ash. More than a million people live under this ash plume, and there is considerable concern about the possible effects of this on their health. We have studied the physicochemical characteristics and in vitro effects of airborne ash collected at 8 km from the crater. More than 30% of the ash was found to be SiO2 (w/w) with most of the particles within the respirable size range. The ash did not inhibit the colony formation of V79-4 cells and failed to activate complement or generate chemotactic factor activity in samples of fresh human serum. It was minimally active in causing the release of lysosomal enzymes from human neutrophile, and did not cause arachidonic acid release from macrophage-like cells. These results were in accord with our epidemiological study, in which very low prevalences of nonspecific respiratory disease were demonstrated even at the area with highest ash exposure.
Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of the two genes for complement C4A and C4B was studied in 56 Japanese patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and 161 normal individuals. HindIII digestion revealed six common patterns, from which the segregation of three common RFLP-types were deduced; 32-15 kb, 32-25 kb, and 32-20-13-6.5 kb. The last type showed positive associations with C4B5 and HLA-DR4. In the RA patients, an increase of this type was found as well as a decrease of the 32-15 kb/32-25-15 kb heterozygotes.
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