Abstract: | Two groups of three calves were exposed to monodisperse aerosols of radiolabelled polystyrene spheres measuring 3.3 microns in aerodynamic diameter (SD 0.3 micron). Although the spheres preferentially deposited in the trachea and major bronchi, 72 per cent of the total radioactivity deposited was found in lung tissue beyond the major bronchi. Mean alveolar deposition, estimated from the end retention value after mucociliary clearance, was 34 per cent in the group of bull calves and 52 per cent in the group of heifer calves. Alveolar deposition increased from 47 to 56 per cent (P less than 0.05) in heifer calves treated with oestradiol. Mucociliary clearance of the spheres was unaffected by repeated exposure to the experimental aerosol and the overall mean mucociliary clearance rate constant was 1.28 (+/- 0.43) h-1 (half-life 32 minutes). Clearance curve profiles tended to be characteristic for individual calves but variation in mucociliary clearance rates within calves was high and on occasions clearance rate inexplicably fell to 10 to 50 per cent of the maximum achievable value for the calf. Neither mucociliary clearance rate nor alveolar deposition was affected by a change in climate from 14 degrees C, 87 per cent relative humidity to 5 degrees C, 75 per cent relative humidity. Both alveolar deposition and mucociliary clearance of the spheres could be manipulated using a beta-adrenergic treatment. |