1. Air Pollution and Brain Damage
- Author
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Biagio Azzarelli, Todd M. Gambling, Anna Villarreal-Calderón, Norma Osnaya, Barry Rewcastle, Sylvia Monroy, Johnny L. Carson, Maria Del Rosario Tizapantzi, Raquel Garcia, Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas, and Hilda Acuna
- Subjects
Male ,Nasal cavity ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Apoptosis ,Toxicology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Olfactory mucosa ,Dogs ,0302 clinical medicine ,Olfactory Mucosa ,medicine ,Animals ,Respiratory system ,Lung ,Mexico ,Molecular Biology ,Cerebral Cortex ,Neurons ,Air Pollutants ,Brain Diseases ,business.industry ,NF-kappa B ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Cell Biology ,Olfactory Bulb ,Olfactory bulb ,Nasal Mucosa ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Cerebral cortex ,Respiratory epithelium ,Female ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,business ,Neuroglia ,Olfactory epithelium ,Respiratory tract - Abstract
Exposure to complex mixtures of air pollutants produces infl ammation in the upper and lower respiratory tract. Because the nasal cavity is a common portal of entry, respiratory and olfactory epithelia are vulnerable targets for toxicological damage. This study has evaluated, by light and electron microscopy and immunohistochemica l expression of nuclear factor-kappa beta (NF- κB) and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), the olfactory and respiratory nasal mucosae, olfactory bulb, and cortical and subcortical structures from 32 healthy mongrel canine residents in Southwest Metropolitan Mexico City (SWMMC), a highly polluted urban region. Findings were compared to those in 8 dogs from Tlaxcala, a less polluted, control city. In SWMMC dogs, expression of nuclear neuronal NF- κB and iNOS in cortical endothelial cells occurred at ages 2 and 4 weeks; subsequent damage included alterations of the blood—brain barrier (BBB), degenerating cortical neurons, apoptotic glial white matter cells, deposition of apolipoprotein E (apoE)-positive lipid droplets in smooth muscle cells and pericytes, nonneuritic plaques , and neurofi brillary tangles. Persistent pulmonary infl ammation and deteriorating olfactory and respiratory barriers may play a role in the neuropathology observed in the brains of these highly exposed canines. Neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's may begin early in life with air pollutants playing a crucial role.
- Published
- 2002
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