Artículos de revistas
pH in exhaled breath condensate and nasal lavage as a biomarker of air pollution-related inflammation in street traffic-controllers and office-workers
Fecha
2013-12-01Registro en:
Clinics. Faculdade de Medicina / USP, v. 68, n. 12, p. 1488-1494, 2013.
1807-5932
1980-5322
S1807-59322013001201488.pdf
S1807-59322013001201488
10.6061/clinics/2013(12)03
WOS:000329985900003
Autor
Lima, Thamires Marques de
Kazama, Cristiane Mayumi
Koczulla, Andreas Rembert
Hiemstra, Pieter S.
Macchione, Mariangela
Fernandes, Ana Luisa Godoy
Santos, Ubiratan de Paula
Bueno-Garcia, Maria Lucia
Zanetta, Dirce Maria
Andre, Carmen Diva Saldiva
Saldiva, Paulo Hilário Nascimento
Nakagawa, Naomi Kondo
Institución
Resumen
OBJECTIVE: To utilize low-cost and simple methods to assess airway and lung inflammation biomarkers related to air pollution. METHODS: A total of 87 male, non-smoking, healthy subjects working as street traffic-controllers or office-workers were examined to determine carbon monoxide in exhaled breath and to measure the pH in nasal lavage fluid and exhaled breath condensate. Air pollution exposure was measured by particulate matter concentration, and data were obtained from fixed monitoring stations (8-h work intervals per day, during the 5 consecutive days prior to the study). RESULTS: Exhaled carbon monoxide was two-fold greater in traffic-controllers than in office-workers. The mean pH values were 8.12 in exhaled breath condensate and 7.99 in nasal lavage fluid in office-workers; these values were lower in traffic-controllers (7.80 and 7.30, respectively). Both groups presented similar cytokines concentrations in both substrates, however, IL-1β and IL-8 were elevated in nasal lavage fluid compared with exhaled breath condensate. The particulate matter concentration was greater at the workplace of traffic-controllers compared with that of office-workers. CONCLUSION: The pH values of nasal lavage fluid and exhaled breath condensate are important, robust, easy to measure and reproducible biomarkers that can be used to monitor occupational exposure to air pollution. Additionally, traffic-controllers are at an increased risk of airway and lung inflammation during their occupational activities compared with office-workers.