Persistent effects of chlorine inhalation on respiratory health

GW Hoyle, ER Svendsen - Annals of the New York Academy of …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2016Wiley Online Library
Chlorine gas is a toxic respiratory irritant that is considered a chemical threat agent because
of the potential for release in industrial accidents or terrorist attacks. Chlorine inhalation
damages the respiratory tract, including the airways and distal lung, and can result in acute
lung injury. Some individuals exposed to chlorine experience a full recovery from acute
injury, whereas others develop persistent adverse effects, such as respiratory symptoms,
inflammation, and lung‐function decrements. In animal models, chlorine can produce …
Chlorine gas is a toxic respiratory irritant that is considered a chemical threat agent because of the potential for release in industrial accidents or terrorist attacks. Chlorine inhalation damages the respiratory tract, including the airways and distal lung, and can result in acute lung injury. Some individuals exposed to chlorine experience a full recovery from acute injury, whereas others develop persistent adverse effects, such as respiratory symptoms, inflammation, and lung‐function decrements. In animal models, chlorine can produce persistent inflammation, remodeling, and obstruction in large or small airways, depending on species. Airways with pseudostratified epithelia are repaired efficiently, with surviving basal epithelial cells serving as progenitor cells that repopulate the complement of differentiated cell types. Distal airways lacking basal cells are repaired less efficiently, leading to chronic inflammation and fibrosis at these sites. Persistent chlorine‐induced airway disease in humans is treated with asthma medication to relieve symptoms. However, such treatment does not ameliorate the underlying disease pathogenesis, so treatments that are more effective at preventing initial development of airway disease after irritant gas exposure and at reversing established disease are needed.
Wiley Online Library