Emission of sulfur dioxide from polyurethane foam and respiratory health effects
2018
Xu, Wangjie | Li, Juexiu | Zhang, Weihua | Wang, Zhaoxia | Wu, Jiajie | Ge, Xiaojing | Wu, Jieli | Cao, Yong | Xie, Yilin | Ying, Diwen | Wang, Yalin | Wang, Lianyun | Qiao, Zhongdong | Jia, Jinping
Recently, health damage to children exposed to synthetic polyurethane (PU) running tracks has aroused social panic in China. Some possible toxic volatiles may be responsible for these damages. However, the exact cause remains unclear. We have detected a low concentration of sulfur dioxide (SO₂; 1.80–3.30 mg/m³) on the surface of the PU running track. Surprisingly, we found that SO₂ was generated from the PU running track, and even such a low concentration of SO₂ could induce severe lung inflammation with hemorrhage, inflammatory cell infiltration, and inflammatory factor secretion in mice after 2-week exposure. Prolonged exposure (5 weeks) to the SO₂ caused chronic pulmonary inflammation and pulmonary fibrosis in the mice. Peripheral hemogram results showed that platelet concentration increased significantly in the SO₂ group compared to that in the control group, and the proportion of blood neutrophils and monocytes among total leukocytes was more imbalanced in the SO₂ group (16.6%) than in the control group (8.0%). Further histopathology results of sternal marrow demonstrated that hematopoietic hyperplasia was severely suppressed with increased reticular stroma and adipocytes under SO₂ exposure. These data indicate that a low concentration of SO₂ generated spontaneously from PU running track outdoors as a secondary product is still harmful to health, as it impairs the respiratory system, hematopoiesis, and immunologic function. This indicates that the low-concentration SO₂ could be a major cause of diseases induced by air pollution, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
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