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Original Articles

Recovery from changes in the blood and nasal cavity and/or lungs of rats caused by exposure to methanol‐fueled engine exhaust

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Pages 323-340 | Received 25 Sep 1992, Accepted 13 Jan 1993, Published online: 20 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

One group of male, pathogen‐free, Fischer 344 rats was exposed to about 17‐fold diluted exhaust generated by an M85 methanol‐fueled engine (methanol with 15% gasoline) without catalyst for 8 h, and then the rates of recovery from the resulting increased levels of plasma formaldehyde and carboxyhemoglobin in their erythrocytes were measured. The carboxyhemoglobin level in the erythrocytes was restored within 4 h, whereas the plasma formaldehyde level was still elevated after 4 h but was restored to the normal level within 8 h. No methanol or formic acid was detected in the plasma. Another group of rats was exposed to the same dilution of exhaust for 8 h/d for 7 d, and then the recovery from histopathological damage of the nasal cavity and lungs was also examined. Hyperplasia/squamous metaplasia and erosion of the respiratory epithelium lining the nasoturbinate, maxilloturbinate, or nasal septum, and infiltration of neutrophils into the submucosa at level 1 (level of the posterior edge of the upper incisor teeth) were observed immediately after the exposure period. Lesions of the respiratory epithelium at level 2 (incisive papilla) were less than those at level 1. Slight lesions at levels 1 or 2 were still noticed 1 wk after exposure, but not 4 wk after exposure. Just after exposure, decreases of Clara cells in the terminal bronchiolus and of cilia in the bronchial/bronchi‐olar epithelium were also observed. Moreover, focal hypertrophy of alveolar walls and increase of macrophages were observed in parts adjacent to respiratory bronchiolus. One week after the exposure period, these changes were no longer seen. These results indicate that changes in the blood and in the nasal cavity and lungs caused by methanol‐fueled engine exhaust are reversible. However, complete recovery from damage of the nasal cavity caused by 7‐d exposure to the exhaust takes 4 wk, and recovery from elevated plasma formaldehyde and erythrocyte carboxyhemoglobin levels caused by a single 8‐h exposure takes 4–8 h.

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