In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study

Abstract The study of the mechanisms by which mineral fibres promote adverse effects in both animals and humans is a hot topic of multidisciplinary research with many aspects that still need to be elucidated. Besides length and diameter, a key parameter that determines the toxicity/pathogenicity of...

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Main Authors: Alessandro F. Gualtieri, Simone Pollastri, Nicola Bursi Gandolfi, Magdalena Lassinantti Gualtieri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2018-05-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-25531-4
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spelling doaj-d194ebb1f38d4132ac075ad45f025ac62020-12-08T05:00:19ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222018-05-018111210.1038/s41598-018-25531-4In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative studyAlessandro F. Gualtieri0Simone Pollastri1Nicola Bursi Gandolfi2Magdalena Lassinantti Gualtieri3Department of Chemical and Geological Sciences, The University of Modena and Reggio EmiliaDepartment of Chemical and Geological Sciences, The University of Modena and Reggio EmiliaDepartment of Chemical and Geological Sciences, The University of Modena and Reggio EmiliaDepartment of Engineering “Enzo Ferrari”, The University of Modena and Reggio EmiliaAbstract The study of the mechanisms by which mineral fibres promote adverse effects in both animals and humans is a hot topic of multidisciplinary research with many aspects that still need to be elucidated. Besides length and diameter, a key parameter that determines the toxicity/pathogenicity of a fibre is biopersistence, one component of which is biodurability. In this paper, biodurability of mineral fibres of social and economic importance (chrysotile, amphibole asbestos and fibrous erionite) has been determined for the first time in a systematic comparative way from in vitro acellular dissolution experiments. Dissolution was possible using the Gamble solution as simulated lung fluid (pH = 4 and at body temperature) so to reproduce the macrophage phagolysosome environment. The investigated mineral fibres display very different dissolution rates. For a 0.25 μm thick fibre, the calculated dissolution time of chrysotile is in the range 94–177 days, very short if compared to that of amphibole fibres (49–245 years), and fibrous erionite (181 years). Diffraction and SEM data on the dissolution products evidence that chrysotile rapidly undergoes amorphization with the formation of a nanophasic silica-rich fibrous metastable pseudomorph as first dissolution step whereas amphibole asbestos and fibrous erionite show minor signs of dissolution even after 9–12 months.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-25531-4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessandro F. Gualtieri
Simone Pollastri
Nicola Bursi Gandolfi
Magdalena Lassinantti Gualtieri
spellingShingle Alessandro F. Gualtieri
Simone Pollastri
Nicola Bursi Gandolfi
Magdalena Lassinantti Gualtieri
In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study
Scientific Reports
author_facet Alessandro F. Gualtieri
Simone Pollastri
Nicola Bursi Gandolfi
Magdalena Lassinantti Gualtieri
author_sort Alessandro F. Gualtieri
title In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study
title_short In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study
title_full In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study
title_fullStr In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study
title_full_unstemmed In vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: A comparative study
title_sort in vitro acellular dissolution of mineral fibres: a comparative study
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract The study of the mechanisms by which mineral fibres promote adverse effects in both animals and humans is a hot topic of multidisciplinary research with many aspects that still need to be elucidated. Besides length and diameter, a key parameter that determines the toxicity/pathogenicity of a fibre is biopersistence, one component of which is biodurability. In this paper, biodurability of mineral fibres of social and economic importance (chrysotile, amphibole asbestos and fibrous erionite) has been determined for the first time in a systematic comparative way from in vitro acellular dissolution experiments. Dissolution was possible using the Gamble solution as simulated lung fluid (pH = 4 and at body temperature) so to reproduce the macrophage phagolysosome environment. The investigated mineral fibres display very different dissolution rates. For a 0.25 μm thick fibre, the calculated dissolution time of chrysotile is in the range 94–177 days, very short if compared to that of amphibole fibres (49–245 years), and fibrous erionite (181 years). Diffraction and SEM data on the dissolution products evidence that chrysotile rapidly undergoes amorphization with the formation of a nanophasic silica-rich fibrous metastable pseudomorph as first dissolution step whereas amphibole asbestos and fibrous erionite show minor signs of dissolution even after 9–12 months.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-25531-4
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