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 Translocation pathways for inhaled asbestos fibers Miserocchi G; Sancini G; Mantegazza F; Chiappino GEnviron Health  2008[Jan]; 7 (ä): 4We discuss the translocation of inhaled asbestos fibers based on pulmonary and  pleuro-pulmonary interstitial fluid dynamics. Fibers can pass the alveolar  barrier and reach the lung interstitium via the paracellular route down a mass  water flow due to combined osmotic (active Na+ absorption) and hydraulic  (interstitial pressure is subatmospheric) pressure gradient. Fibers can be  dragged from the lung interstitium by pulmonary lymph flow (primary  translocation) wherefrom they can reach the blood stream and subsequently  distribute to the whole body (secondary translocation). Primary translocation  across the visceral pleura and towards pulmonary capillaries may also occur if  the asbestos-induced lung inflammation increases pulmonary interstitial pressure  so as to reverse the trans-mesothelial and trans-endothelial pressure gradients.  Secondary translocation to the pleural space may occur via the physiological  route of pleural fluid formation across the parietal pleura; fibers accumulation  in parietal pleura stomata (black spots) reflects the role of parietal lymphatics  in draining pleural fluid. Asbestos fibers are found in all organs of subjects  either occupationally exposed or not exposed to asbestos. Fibers concentration  correlates with specific conditions of interstitial fluid dynamics, in line with  the notion that in all organs microvascular filtration occurs from capillaries to  the extravascular spaces. Concentration is high in the kidney (reflecting high  perfusion pressure and flow) and in the liver (reflecting high microvascular  permeability) while it is relatively low in the brain (due to low permeability of  blood-brain barrier). Ultrafine fibers (length < 5 mum, diameter < 0.25 mum) can  travel larger distances due to low steric hindrance (in mesothelioma about 90% of  fibers are ultrafine). Fibers translocation is a slow process developing over  decades of life: it is aided by high biopersistence, by inflammation-induced  increase in permeability, by low steric hindrance and by fibers motion pattern at  low Reynolds numbers; it is hindered by fibrosis that increases interstitial flow  resistances.|Asbestos/*pharmacokinetics/toxicity[MESH]|Asbestosis/*etiology/pathology[MESH]|Biological Transport/physiology[MESH]|Extracellular Space/metabolism[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Lung/*metabolism[MESH]|Lymphatic System/metabolism[MESH]|Mineral Fibers/toxicity[MESH]|Permeability[MESH]|Pleura/*metabolism[MESH]|Time Factors[MESH]
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