Searched for: person:lcc4
A training model for the stereomicroscopic evaluation of flap survival
Chen L; Harper A; Ballantyne DL; Smahel J
The stereomicroscopic appearance of the vasculature and circulation of groin flaps, with their epigastric pedicles divided at various time intervals, is an early diagnostic indication of flap viability. A simple and comprehensive training model, with characteristic vascular and flow changes within a single flap, is provided in rats, with pedicles transected at three to four days after the flap is raised
PMID: 3598946
ISSN: 0743-684x
CID: 64681
Study and models of total lead exposures of battery workers
Chavalitnitikul, C; Levin, L; Chen, L C
In an attempt to establish a more realistic and reliable model for relating environmental exposure measurements to the biological indices of exposure, a study was undertaken to quantify the total sources of lead exposure among lead storage battery workers. In addition to the usual personal and area lead air sampling, quantitative and repeatable measurements of removable lead from work surfaces and the workers' hands and faces were obtained daily for ten consecutive work days in the pasting and battery assembly departments. Mathematical correlations of blood lead and zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) levels as the dependent variable with the lead exposure sources were derived and demonstrated most strongly as log-log relationships. Statistical analyses by computer programming indicated that the airborne, hand, facial and work surface levels have a high degree of inter-correlation with a very significant positive individual correlation with blood lead levels and a somewhat lower correlation with ZPP. The results suggest that contaminated personal and work surfaces may play a more significant role in toxic occupational and environmental exposures, generally, than had heretofore been demonstrated or suspected
PMID: 6517025
ISSN: 0002-8894
CID: 72455
Exposure-response relationship of bronchial mucociliary clearance in rabbits following acute inhalations of sulfuric acid mist
Schlesinger RB; Chen LC; Driscoll KE
Eight rabbits underwent 1 h oral inhalations of submicrometer sulfuric acid mist at concentrations ranging from approx. 100-1084 micrograms/m3, followed by measurement of the mucociliary clearance of a tracer aerosol from the bronchial tree. These data, plus those from a previous study, were used to construct an exposure concentration-response relationship for alterations in clearance produced by H2SO4. The response pattern is characterized by transient acceleration of clearance at low concentration exposures, and retardation at higher concentrations. In addition, comparison of these results with those from a similar study using human volunteers supports use of the rabbit as an appropriate model for studying mucociliary clearance alterations produced by inhaled irritants
PMID: 6474515
ISSN: 0378-4274
CID: 66671
Response of the bronchial mucociliary clearance system in rabbits to inhaled sulfite and sulfuric acid aerosols
Chen LC; Schlesinger RB
A group of eight rabbits was exposed (orally) for 1 hr to a distilled water aerosol (sham control) or to submicrometer aerosols of either a transition metal sulfite complex (Fe(III)-S(IV], sodium sulfite (Na2SO3), or sulfuric acid (H2SO4). Mucociliary clearance was evaluated by external retention measurements of radioactively tagged tracer particles from the bronchial tree. Fe(III)-S(IV) in the range of 238 to 1227 micrograms/m3 (as SO2-3) produced no significant change from sham control in the mean residence time (MRT) of the tracer, indicating no effect upon mucociliary clearance rate. On the other hand, Na2SO3 at levels greater than or equal to 1200 micrograms/m3 (as SO2-3) resulted in clearance acceleration; the lack of effect of Fe(III)-S(IV) is possibly due to its stability. H2SO4 at 260 to 2155 micrograms/m3 produced a significant dose-related response, indicating clearance acceleration at low concentrations and a depression at higher levels
PMID: 6636178
ISSN: 0041-008x
CID: 66672
Physiological and histological alterations in the bronchial mucociliary clearance system of rabbits following intermittent oral or nasal inhalation of sulfuric acid mist
Schlesinger RB; Naumann BD; Chen LC
Rabbits were exposed to submicometer sulfuric acid mist (H2SO4) for 1 h/d, 5 d/w for 4 wk, during which time mucociliary clearance was monitored by external in vivo measurements of tagged tracer aerosol retention. One group was exposed orally to 250 micrograms/m3, another to the same concentration via the nose, and a third to 500 micrograms/m3 also via nasal breathing. Clearance was accelerated on specific individual days during the course of the acid exposures, especially at 500 micrograms/m3. In all series, clearance was significantly faster, compared to preexposure controls, during a 2-wk follow-up period after acid exposures had ceased. At the end of this period, the rabbits were sacrificed, and histological sections were obtained from the tracheobronchial tree. Significantly increased epithelial thickness of small conducting airways, compared to sham exposure controls, occurred in rabbits exposed orally at 250 micrograms/m3 or nasally at 500 micrograms/m3, and additionally the lumen of the smallest airways of the former group was narrower than control. The number of airways containing epithelial secretory cells was also significantly greater in these acid exposure groups compared to sham controls. The only change in the rabbits exposed nasally at 250 micrograms/m3 was a significant increase in the number of airways with epithelial secretory cells in the smallest airway classification. The histological alterations provide a basis for observed changes in clearance, and are similar to those found in chronic bronchitis in humans and experimental animals. Differences in site and degree of histological response and degree of physiological change between the two groups exposed to identical acid concentrations appear to have been due to differences in exposure mode, with resultant effects on breathing pattern, aerosol size distribution, and concentration penetrating beyond the upper respiratory tract to specific lung sites
PMID: 6655745
ISSN: 0098-4108
CID: 66673
A system for measurement of radioactive aerosol retention in the lungs of rabbits
Schlesinger RB; Naumann B; Chen LC
PMID: 7056651
ISSN: 0017-9078
CID: 66674
THE PRODUCTION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A TRANSITION-METAL FE(III)-SULFUR(IV) AEROSOL - REPLY [Letter]
SCHLESINGER, RB; GURMAN, JL; CHEN, LC
ISI:A1981LU05700027
ISSN: 0004-6981
CID: 40202
THE PRODUCTION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A TRANSITION-METAL (FE(III))-S(IV) AEROSOL
Schlesinger, RB; Gurman, JL; Chen, LC
ISI:A1980KN22500006
ISSN: 0004-6981
CID: 27892