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      Exposure to industrial wideband noise increases connective tissue in the rat liver.

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          Abstract

          Rats were daily exposed (eight hours/day) for a period of four weeks to the same high-intensity wideband noise that was recorded before in a large textile plant. Histologic observation of liver sections of the rats was used to perform quantitative comparison of hepatic connective tissue (dyed by Masson trichromic staining) between the noise-exposed and control animals. For that, we have photographed at random centrolobular areas of stained rat liver sections. We found that noise exposure resulted in significant enhancement in the area of collagen-rich connective tissue present in the centrolobular domain of the rat liver. Our data strengthen previous evidence showing that fibrotic transformation is a systemic effect of chronic exposure of rodents and humans to industrial wideband noise.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Noise Health
          Noise & health
          Medknow
          1463-1741
          1463-1741
          November 3 2012
          : 14
          : 60
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Anatomy and UMIB of ICBAS, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal. mjoliveira@icbas.up.pt
          Article
          NoiseHealth_2012_14_60_227_102959
          10.4103/1463-1741.102959
          23117537
          367f00c0-6e4e-4e1e-8ee3-f33e4051887a
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