articleJournal of Toxicology and Environmental HealthOct 12, 2002Closed access

EXTRAPULMONARY TRANSLOCATION OF ULTRAFINE CARBON PARTICLES FOLLOWING WHOLE-BODY INHALATION EXPOSURE OF RATS

University of Rochester · University of New Mexico

PubMed
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Abstract

Studies with intravenously injected ultrafine particles have shown that the liver is the major organ of their uptake from the blood circulation. Measuring translocation of inhaled ultrafine particles to extrapulmonary organs via the blood compartment is hampered by methodological difficulties (i.e., label may come off, partial solubilization) and analytical limitations (measurement of very small amounts). The objective of our pilot study was to determine whether ultrafine elemental carbon particles translocate to the liver and other extrapulmonary organs following inhalation as singlet particles by rats. We generated ultrafine (13)C particles as an aerosol with count median diameters (CMDs) of 20-29 nm (GSD…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Inhalation
  • Ultrafine particle
  • Inhalation exposure
  • Chemistry
  • Lung
  • Graphite
  • Radiochemistry
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Clean water and sanitation
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