brief ozone exposure preserves immune signaling while producing mild oxidative shifts

Transient exposure of blood to ozone at up to 78 µg/ml does not depress cytokine production, though there is a slight increase in haemolysis and a small decrease in intracellular reduced glutathione.

What this means for you

Your immune system relies on chemical messengers called cytokines to coordinate responses to stress and recovery. This finding shows that short ozone exposure doesn't suppress that signaling — meaning the body's natural communication network stays intact, even as mild oxidative activity occurs in the background.

The published research

Ozone as an oxidant and its influence on free radical activity and
· 2000
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