Published: Oct 1998 | Eur Respir J. 1988 Oct;1(9):852-5.

Nasal mucociliary transport in healthy subjects is slower when breathing dry air

Salah B, Dinh Xuan AT, Fouilladieu JL, Lockhart A, Regnard J.


Abstract

The authors assessed the effect of dry air (DA) applied by mask and room air (RA) by tidal nasal breathing on the velocity of nasal mucociliary transport in 11 healthy, non-smoking subjects.

Subjects were breathing (only nose breathing!) either room air (RA, 22-24°C, 40-43%RH) or conditioned dry air (DA, 25-29°C, <0.1%RH), through the most patent nostril, for 30 minutes on three different study days. On each study day, the trial was conducted at the same daytime, in the same nostril. DA was breathed through a light-weight, tight-fitting nasal mask. Transit time of mucous from the anterior nose to throat was measured immediately after RA or DA exposure.

For the Saccharin nasal transit time (SNTT) 250 microgram of saccharin was deposited on the anterior part of the inferior turbinate under visual control and saliva was swallowed every 30 s thereafter, until saccharin was tasted.

The group-average SNTT on DA was 18.5 +/- 8.6 min, which was significantly longer than on RA (11.9 +/- 5.3 min).

Results

The findings showed that dry air breathing results in a significantly slower nasal mucociliary transport. The reason is most probably due to changes in the rheological properties or adhesiveness of nasal mucus and/or slowing of ciliary beating.

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Breathing dry air impairs our respiratory defense mechanism against airborne pollutants

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by Dr.med. Walter Hugentobler

Dr.med. Walter Hugentobler

This study showed how breathing dry air impairs our respiratory defense mechanism against airborne pollutants and microbes.

The group breathing dry air had much longer between receiving the saccharin in the nostrils and tasting in the throat than the group breathing regular room air.

If our immune system is impaired by dry air then it follows that maintaining an optimum humidity in working environments will reduce absenteeism from airborne infections, like the common cold or flu.

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