scholarly journals Individual-level modifiers of the acute effects of air pollution on mortality in Wuhan, China

Author(s):  
Peirong Zhong ◽  
Shichun Huang ◽  
Xiaotong Zhang ◽  
Simin Wu ◽  
Yaohui Zhu ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 139-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Cai ◽  
Ang Zhao ◽  
Jinzhuo Zhao ◽  
Renjie Chen ◽  
Weibing Wang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-23
Author(s):  
Kelly C. Bishop ◽  
Sehba Husain-Krautter ◽  
Jonathan D. Ketcham ◽  
Nicolai V. Kuminoff ◽  
Corbett Schimming

We hypothesize that analyzing individual-level secondary data with instrumental variable (IV) methods can advance knowledge of the long-term effects of air pollution on dementia. We discuss issues in measurement using secondary data and how IV estimation can overcome biases due to measurement error and unmeasured variables. We link air-quality data from the Environmental Protection Agency’s monitors with Medicare claims data to illustrate the use of secondary data to document associations. Additionally, we describe results from a previous study that uses an IV for pollution and finds that PM2.5’s effects on dementia are larger than non-causal associations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 1348-1356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandrah P. Eckel ◽  
Zilu Zhang ◽  
Rima Habre ◽  
Edward B. Rappaport ◽  
William S. Linn ◽  
...  

Mechanisms for the adverse respiratory effects of traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) have yet to be established. We evaluated the acute effects of TRAP exposure on proximal and distal airway inflammation by relating indoor nitric oxide (NO), a marker of TRAP exposure in the indoor microenvironment, to airway and alveolar sources of exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO).FeNO was collected online at four flow rates in 1635 schoolchildren (aged 12–15 years) in southern California (USA) breathing NO-free air. Indoor NO was sampled hourly and linearly interpolated to the time of the FeNO test. Estimated parameters quantifying airway wall diffusivity (DawNO) and flux (J′awNO) and alveolar concentration (CANO) sources of FeNO were related to exposure using linear regression to adjust for potential confounders.We found that TRAP exposure indoors was associated with elevated alveolar NO. A 10 ppb higher indoor NO concentration at the time of the FeNO test was associated with 0.10 ppb higher average CANO (95% CI 0.04–0.16) (equivalent to a 7.1% increase from the mean), 4.0% higher J′awNO (95% CI −2.8–11.3) and 0.2% lower DawNO (95% CI −4.8–4.6).These findings are consistent with an airway response to TRAP exposure that was most marked in the distal airways.


Circulation ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 143 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fan He ◽  
Julio Fernandez-Mendoza ◽  
Jeff D Yanosky ◽  
Vernon M Chinchilli ◽  
Laila Al-shaar ◽  
...  

Introduction: Sleep deprivation and large sleep variability are potential risk factors for obesity and cardiovascular diseases. While it is plausible that particulate air pollution may contribute to these unfavorable sleep patterns, very few studies have been conducted to assess the association between fine particulate (PM 2.5 ) air pollution and objectively measured sleep duration and its variability in an adolescent U.S. population. Hypothesis: We tested the hypothesis that higher individual-level short-term PM 2.5 exposure is associated with shorter sleep duration and higher sleep variability among adolescents. Methods: We analyzed the available data collected from 421 adolescents who participated in the follow-up examination of the population-based Penn State Child Cohort (PSCC) study. To estimate individual-level short-term PM 2.5 exposure, a personal nephelometer (Thermo pDR-1200) was used to measure real-time PM 2.5 concentration for 24 hours from the study participants. The 24-hour mean PM 2.5 concentration was used to quantify the short-term PM 2.5 exposure. To obtain objectively-measured habitual sleep duration (HSD) and habitual sleep variability (HSV), an actigraphy (GT3X+) was used to collect sleep data for 7 consecutive nights, including 1 night in parallel with the PM 2.5 monitoring and 6 nights thereafter. HSD and HSV were calculated as the intra-individual mean and standard deviation (SD) of the 7-night sleep duration, respectively. Participants with < 5 nights (70% of 7 nights) of data were excluded from the analyses. The associations between the individual-level PM 2.5 exposure and HSD/HSV were evaluated by using multi-variable adjusted linear regression models, controlling for age, race, sex, BMI percentile, environmental temperature, and relative humidity. Results: The mean (SD) age of the study population was 16.9 (2.2) years. The study sample consisted of 54% males and 78% whites. The 24-hour mean (SD) of PM 2.5 concentration was 16.9 (26.8) μg/m 3 , while the average HSD and HSV were 7.0 (0.9) hours and 1.2 (0.6) hours, respectively. We observed that a 10 μg/m 3 increase in the 24-hour mean PM 2.5 was associated with significantly lower HSD [β (SE): -0.06 (0.03) hours, p=0.02] and larger HSV [β (SE): 0.04 (0.02) hours, p=0.04]. The effect sizes were approximately 7% of their respective SDs. Conclusion: Individual-level short-term PM 2.5 exposure is associated with objective-measured shorter sleep duration and higher night-to-night sleep variability among U.S. adolescents. These observed associations suggest that particulate air pollution exposure in early life may impact habitual sleep pattern, which may in turn be associated with the risks of obesity and cardiovascular diseases in later life.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (45) ◽  
pp. 943-947
Author(s):  
Hongtao Niu ◽  
◽  
Tao Yu ◽  
Xuexin Li ◽  
Hanna Wu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Philip Carthy ◽  
Aonghus Ó Domhnaill ◽  
Margaret O’Mahony ◽  
Anne Nolan ◽  
Frank Moriarty ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Links between air pollution and asthma are less well established for older adults than some younger groups. Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations are widely used as an indicator of transport-related air pollution, and some literature suggests NO2 may directly affect asthma. Methods This study used data on 8162 adults &gt;50 years old in the Republic of Ireland to model associations between estimated annual outdoor concentration of NO2 and the probability of having asthma. Individual-level geo-coded survey data from The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) were linked to model-based estimates of annual average NO2 at 50 m resolution. Asthma was identified using two methods: self-reported diagnoses and respondents’ use of medications related to obstructive airway diseases. Logistic regressions were used to model the relationships. Results NO2 concentrations were positively associated with the probability of asthma [marginal effect (ME) per 1 ppb of airborne NO2 = 0.24 percentage points asthma self-report, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.06–0.42, mean asthma prevalence 0.09; for use of relevant medications ME = 0.21 percentage points, 95% CI 0.049–0.37, mean prevalence 0.069]. Results were robust to varying model specification and time period. Respondents in the top fifth percentile of NO2 exposure had a larger effect size but also greater standard error (ME = 2.4 percentage points asthma self-report, 95% CI −0. 49 to 5.3). Conclusions Associations between local air pollution and asthma among older adults were found at relatively low concentrations. To illustrate this, the marginal effect of an increase in annual average NO2 concentration from sample minimum to median (2.5 ppb) represented about 7–8% of the sample average prevalence of asthma.


2004 ◽  
Vol 170 (10) ◽  
pp. 1080-1087 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandros Gryparis ◽  
Bertil Forsberg ◽  
Klea Katsouyanni ◽  
Antonis Analitis ◽  
Giota Touloumi ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1977 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Hackney ◽  
W. S. Linn ◽  
J. G. Mohler ◽  
C. R. Collier

To investigate whether adaptation which modifies some acute effects of ozone (O3) exposure can develop in humans, six male volunteers with respiratory hyperreactivity were exposed in a controlled environment chamber to 0.5 ppm O3 2h/day for 4 successive days under conditions stimulating ambient pollution exposures. One subject showed little measurable response, while five showed function decrement on exposure days 1–3 which was largely reversed by day 4. Symptom responses generally paralleled the physiological responses. These results suggest that at least some humans adapt to O3 exposure at concentrations occurring in severe community air pollution episodes, to the extent that obvious acute respiratory effects are prevented. Other adverse effects of O3 may not be prevented by this adaptation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 1473-1487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fangping Wang ◽  
Hanping Zhao ◽  
Xiaoxue Zhang ◽  
Chence Niu ◽  
Jianfang Ma

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