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Journal ArticleDOI

Deposition of Ultrafine (NANO) Particles in the Human Lung

Bahman Asgharian, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2007 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 13, pp 1045-1054
TLDR
A mathematical model of nanoparticle transport by airflow convection, axial diffusion, and convective mixing (dispersion) was developed in realistic stochastically generated asymmetric human lung geometries and good agreement was found between predicted depositions of ultrafine (nano) particles with measurements in the literature.
Abstract
Increased production of industrial devices constructed with nanostructured materials raises the possibility of environmental and occupational human exposure with consequent adverse health effects. Ultrafine (nano) particles are suspected of having increased toxicity due to their size characteristics that serve as carrier transports. For this reason, it is critical to refine and improve existing deposition models in the nano-size range. A mathematical model of nanoparticle transport by airflow convection, axial diffusion, and convective mixing (dispersion) was developed in realistic stochastically generated asymmetric human lung geometries. The cross-sectional averaged convective-diffusion equation was solved analytically to find closed-form solutions for particle concentration and losses per lung airway. Airway losses were combined to find lobar, regional, and total lung deposition. Axial transport by diffusion and dispersion was found to have an effect on particle deposition. The primary impact was in the pulmonary region of the lung for particles larger than 10 nm in diameter. Particles below 10 nm in diameter were effectively removed from the inhaled air in the tracheobronchial region with little or no penetration into the pulmonary region. Significant variation in deposition was observed when different asymmetric lung geometries were used. Lobar deposition was found to be highest in the left lower lobe. Good agreement was found between predicted depositions of ultrafine (nano) particles with measurements in the literature. The approach used in the proposed model is recommended for more realistic assessment of regional deposition of diffusion-dominated particles in the lung, as it provides a means to more accurately relate exposure and dose to lung injury and other biological responses.

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Reference EntryDOI

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Cyclic Breathing Simulations in Large-Scale Models of the Lung Airway From the Oronasal Opening to the Terminal Bronchioles

TL;DR: In this paper, a reduced-geometry airway model was used, in which several airway branches in each generation were truncated, and only select flow paths were retained to the 16th generation.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cyclic Breathing Simulations in Large Scale Models of the Lung Airway From the Oronasal Opening to the Terminal Bronchioles

TL;DR: In this article, a reduced-order geometry was used, in which several airway branches in each generation were truncated, and only select flow paths were retained to G16.
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TL;DR: Based on evidence from transcriptomics studies, particle-induced biological effects, including cytotoxicity, developmental alterations and immune responses, that are dependent on both material-intrinsic and acquired/transformed properties are discussed.
References
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Respiratory effects are associated with the number of ultrafine particles.

TL;DR: The present study suggests that the size distribution of ambient particles helps to elucidate the properties of ambient aerosols responsible for health effects.
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Deposition of particles in the human respiratory tract in the size range 0.005–15 μm

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented experimentally determined total and regional deposition data for breathing monodisperse aerosols of a wide particle size range at different patterns through the mouth and nose.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exposure to carbon nanotube material: aerosol release during the handling of unrefined single-walled carbon nanotube material

TL;DR: Although laboratory studies indicated that with sufficient agitation, unrefined SWCNT material can release fine particles into the air, concentrations generated while handling material in the field were very low, and estimates of the airborne concen-tration of nanotube material generated during handling suggest that concentrations were lower than 53μg/m3 in all cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pulmonary Retention of Ultrafine and Fine Particles in Rats

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