Lung damage from inhaling nanoparticles sparks off health fears
August 19th, 2009 - 5:25 pm ICT by ANILondon, August 19 (ANI): A new study, which analyzed seven Chinese factory workers developing severe lung damage from inhaling nanoparticles, has triggered off debate over the environmental-health effects of nanotechnology.
According to a report in Nature News, the study claims to be the first to document cases of ill health caused by nanoparticles in humans.
“The study raises the bar for doing appropriate research as fast as possible to find out where the dangers might lie when working with nanomaterials,” said Andrew Maynard, a nanotechnology expert at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington DC.
The study described seven women, aged 18-47 years, who worked in an unidentified printing factory in China. Two of them later died.
They all had pleural granulomas - ball-like collections of immune cells in the lining of the lung that form when the immune system is unable to remove a foreign body.
They also had excessive, discoloured fluid in the lung lining. Particles around 30 nanometres in diameter were found in lung fluid and tissue.
According to the study, the symptoms were caused by inhaling fumes produced when the workers heated polystyrene boards to 75-100 degrees Celsius.
The boards had previously been sprayed with a ‘paste material’ made from a plastic identified as a polyacrylate ester.
The workroom, of around 70 square metres, had one door and no windows. The ventilation unit had broken down five months before symptoms started to manifest, and the door had been kept closed to keep the room warm.
The workers wore cotton gauze masks only on an “occasional basis”.
Electron microscopy found nanoparticles around 30 nanometres in diameter in the paste and in dust particles that had collected at the inlet of the broken ventilation unit.
“It is obvious the disease is not due to microparticles or vapours, because the pulmonary epithelial cells are full of nanoparticles,” said lead author Yuguo Song, a clinical toxicologist at Beijing Chaoyang Hospital.
Maynard said that the symptoms seen in the patients are “similar” to those seen in animals exposed to nanoparticles.
He added that damage to the areas surrounding the lungs suggests that larger particles are not to blame, as these tend to be constrained within the lungs. (ANI)
- Tiny particles in computers, shampoos 'can adversely affect lungs' - Nov 18, 2010
- Liquid invisibility cloak may soon be a reality - Jan 09, 2010
- Nanoparticles could offer relief from skin allergies - Apr 04, 2011
- Carbon nanotubes can affect lung lining - Oct 26, 2009
- New ICU drug could cut lung injuries - Jun 08, 2011
- How carbon nanotubes can affect lining of the lungs - Oct 26, 2009
- Now, living, breathing human lung-on-a-chip - Jun 25, 2010
- Indian doctors remove embedded bullet from Nigerian man - Jul 17, 2011
- Tiny gold and silver nanoparticles could revolutionize optics - Dec 04, 2010
- Study casts doubts on safety of invisible nano-sunscreens - Mar 08, 2010
- New magnetic paper can make tiny motors - Jan 06, 2010
- How TB bacteria to survive in infected organs - Dec 07, 2010
- Coming soon: Banana smoothies enriched with nano-sized minerals - Jun 11, 2010
- Nanoparticles in common cosmetics, paints may cause genetic damage - Nov 17, 2009
- Nanoparticles in sunscreen toxic if ingested - Apr 09, 2010
Tags: andrew maynard, cotton gauze, dust particles, electron microscopy, epithelial cells, fluid in the lung, gauze masks, health fears, immune cells, lung damage, nature news, occasional basis, paste material, polyacrylate, printing factory, seven women, woodrow wilson international, woodrow wilson international center, woodrow wilson international center for scholars, workroom