波河三角洲(意大利北部)室内流行病学研究:污染物暴露对成人急性呼吸道症状和呼吸功能的影响

M. Simoni, L. Carrozzi, S. Baldacci, A. Scognamiglio, F. Pede, T. Sapigni, G. Viegi
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引用次数: 53

摘要

作者研究了相对低剂量二氧化氮和可吸入悬浮颗粒物(即< 2.5 μ)对生活在威尼斯附近的波河三角洲地区的383名成人(15-72岁)急性呼吸道症状和呼气峰流量的影响。在冬季1周和夏季1周期间,作者对每个参与者的房屋进行监测,测量二氧化氮(十亿分之一)和可吸入悬浮颗粒(μg/m3)浓度。还收集了性别、年龄、身高、体重、日常活动模式、主动和被动吸烟、慢性呼吸道疾病、每日呼气高峰流量以及在监测周内出现急性呼吸道症状的信息。以平均振幅百分比(即振幅/平均值)和日变化百分比(最大/最小)研究呼气流量峰值变化。二氧化氮暴露指数(二氧化氮暴露指数)和可呼吸性悬浮颗粒物暴露指数(可呼吸性悬浮颗粒物暴露指数)作为污染物浓度与暴露时间的乘积。作者在中位数的基础上考虑指数的“低”或“高”。冬季二氧化氮中位数为20 ppb,夏季为14 ppb;冬季(33 ppb)和夏季(20 ppb)厨房的二氧化氮含量最高。冬季可吸入悬浮颗粒物中位数为68 μg/m3,夏季为45 μg/m3。只有在冬季,支气管炎/哮喘症状与“高”二氧化氮和可吸入悬浮颗粒物指数之间存在显著关联。在不吸烟的受试者中,在夏季也观察到“高”可吸入悬浮颗粒物暴露指数的显著影响。在呼气峰流量及其变异性方面,可吸入悬浮颗粒物暴露指数与振幅/平均值和最大值/平均值的增加有关;然而,就二氧化氮暴露指数而言,这种关联仅在患有慢性呼吸道疾病(即哮喘和支气管炎)的受试者中具有显著意义。这些关系仅在冬季显著。总之,目前的研究结果表明,相对低剂量的污染物与成人急性呼吸道症状和呼气流量峰值之间存在关联。
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The Po River Delta (North Italy) Indoor Epidemiological Study: Effects of Pollutant Exposure on Acute Respiratory Symptoms and Respiratory Function in Adults
Abstract The authors studied the effects of relatively low doses of nitrogen dioxide and respirable suspended particulate matter (i.e., < 2.5 μ) on acute respiratory symptoms and on peak expiratory flow in 383 adults (15–72 yr of age) who lived in the Po River Delta area, located near Venice. During 2 wk—1 wk in winter and 1 wk in summer—the authors monitored each participant's house to measure nitrogen dioxide (in parts per billion) and respirable suspended particulate (μg/m3) concentration. Information on sex, age, height, weight, daily activity patterns, active and passive smoking, chronic respiratory diseases, daily peak expiratory flow, and presence of acute respiratory symptoms during the weeks monitoring occurred were also collected. Peak expiratory flow variation was studied as mean amplitude percentage (i.e., amplitude/mean) and percentage of diurnal variation (maximum/minimum). The exposure indices to nitrogen dioxide (nitrogen dioxide-index of exposure) and to respirable suspended particulate matter (respirable suspended particulate matter-index of exposure) were computed as the product of pollutant concentration and time of exposure. The authors considered indices as “low” or “high” on the basis of the median value. The median nitrogen dioxide was 20 ppb in winter and 14 ppb in summer; the highest nitrogen dioxide levels occurred in the kitchen in the winter (33 ppb) and summer (20 ppb). The median respirable suspended particulate matter was 68 μg/m3 in winter and 45 μg/m3 in summer. Only in winter were there significant associations between bronchitic/asthmatic symptoms and “high” nitrogen dioxide and respirable suspended particulate matter indices. In subjects who did not smoke, a significant influence of the “high” respirable suspended particulate matter-index of exposure was also observed in summer. With respect to peak expiratory flow and its variability, respirable suspended particulate matter-index of exposure was associated with an increase of both amplitude/mean and maximum/mean; however, with respect to the nitrogen dioxide-index of exposure, the association was significant only in subjects with chronic respiratory diseases (i.e., asthma and bronchitis). These relationships were significant only in winter. In conclusion, the results of the current study indicate that there is an association between relatively low doses of pollutants and acute respiratory symptoms and peak expiratory flow in adults.
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