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21149 
Journal Article 
Pathologic response of the lung to irritant gases 
Robinson, FR; Runnels, LJ; Conrad, DA; Teclaw, RF; Thacker, HL 
1990 
Veterinary and Human Toxicology
ISSN: 0145-6296 
NIOSH/00199048 
32 
569-572 
English 
The pathologic response of the lung to irritant gases ranges from the acute exudative phase through the subacute proliferative phase to the chronic fibrosing phase. These responses are based on damage to the Type I cells, and possibly endothelial cells, and the subsequent proliferative and repair processes in the surviving animals. Responses to high dose exposures appear at the microscopic level as exudation of protein rich fluids into alveoli (alveolar edema) and subsequent death due to anoxia. Physiologically, this could be described as a mismatch of ventilation with perfusion, resulting in impaired gas exchange. Animals surviving this acute exudative phase resolve the alveolar edema to fibrin, and Type II cells become hypertrophic and hyperplastic in the process of replacing the damaged Type I cells. The acute and subacute responses also elicit inflammatory changes in the interstitium of the lung that may progress to fibrosis in the chronic stage of a survivable exposure. Diagnostic cases in livestock involving irritant gases reflect similar toxic injuries to the lung. 
DCN-194441; Respiratory system disorders; Lung cells; Lung irritants; Clinical diagnosis; Toxic gases; Lung disease; Pathomorphology; Exposure levels 
• Ammonia
     Literature Search – March 2012 (private)
     Literature Search Results
• Formaldehyde [archived]
     Sensory Irritation
          Found
          Screened
               Human
                    Not Primary Study
     Animal Non-Cancer Respiratory Pathology
          Excluded due to abstract screening
               Not primary literature (commentary, editorial, correspondences)
     Immune Section
          Exclude - miscellaneous reasons
     Inflammation/Reactive Oxygen Species
          PubMed
          Toxline
          Screened by Title/Abstract
               Not Primary Study: Review, Commentary, Abstract, Policy, Current Practice, Workplace Assessment
     Retroactive RIS import
          Pre2013
               Animal non-cancer respiratory pathology Pre2013 search
                    Excluded due to title/abstract screening
                         Not primary literature
          2013
               HERO Formaldehyde Immune Section 20Mar2013
               Irritation- Pubmed WOS Sorted
                    Human
                         Not Primary Study
          2014
               HERO_Formaldehyde_InflammationReactiveOxygenSpecies_pid_31_uid_5713Sorting091214
               Formaldehyde_Irritation_102814
                    Human
                         Not Primary Study
               HERO_Formaldehyde_InflammationReactiveOxygenSpecies_pid_31_uid_5713
                    Screened (Title/Abstract)
                         Not Primary Study: Review, Commentary, Abstract, Policy, Current Practice, Workplace Assessment, etc
               Immune_HERO_allyr
• IRIS Formaldehyde (Inhalation) [Final 2024]
     Literature Indexing
          PubMed
          Toxline, TSCATS, DART
     Literature Identification
          Sensory Irritation in Humans
               Supplemental or not primary research
          Respiratory Tract Pathology in Animals
               Supplemental or not primary research
          Immune-Mediated Conditions in Humans, Including Asthma and Allergy
               Excluded
          Inflammation and Immune-Related Mechanistic Studies
               Supplemental or not primary research