1. Wood smoke in a controlled exposure experiment with human volunteers
- Author
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Lykke Forchhammer, Torben Sigsgaard, Therese Koops Grønborg, Søren K. Kjærgaard, Bjarne Bruun Jensen, Jakob Hjort Bønløkke, Andreas Massling, Rossana Bossi, Ingunn Skogstad Riddervold, and Lars Mølhave
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Atmosphere Exposure Chambers ,Health Status ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,Wood smoke ,Respiratory Mucosa ,Toxicology ,Young Adult ,Animal science ,health effects ,Smoke ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Low exposure ,Humans ,Medicine ,Particle Size ,humans ,education ,particles ,Inhalation Exposure ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Normal lung function ,Middle Aged ,Environmental perception ,Wood ,controlled exposure ,Air exposure ,Human exposure ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Female ,Particulate Matter ,wood smoke ,business - Abstract
Exposure to wood smoke in the general population is increasing and concurrently, also our awareness. This article describes a wood-smoke generating system for studying human exposure to wood smoke and symptoms related to this exposure. Twenty nonsmoking atopic human participants with normal lung function and normal bronchial reactivity were randomly exposed for 3h at three different exposure conditions; clean filtered air (control exposure) and wood smoke with a characteristic particulate matter (PM) concentration of 200 µg/m3 (low) and 400 µg/m3 (high) under controlled environmental conditions. The range for PM2.5 load observed for single experiments was 165–303 µg/m3 for the low exposure and 205–662 µg/m3 for the high exposure, whereas particle loads during clean air exposure most often were below the detection limit (
- Published
- 2011
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