Creason J, Neas L, Walsh D, Williams R, Sheldon L, Liao D, Shy C
National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, US EPA, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711, USA.
J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol. 2001 Mar-Apr;11(2):116-22. doi: 10.1038/sj.jea.7500154.
This study investigates the relationship between ambient fine particle pollution and impaired cardiac autonomic control in the elderly. Heart rate variability (HRV) among 56 elderly (mean age 82) nonsmoking residents of a retirement center in Baltimore County, Maryland, was monitored for 4 weeks, from July 27 through August 22, 1998. The weather was seasonally mild (63-84 degrees F mean daily temperature) with low to moderate levels of fine particles (PM2.5 < 50 micrograms/m3). Two groups of approximately 30 subjects were examined on alternate days. A spline mixed-effects model revealed a negative relationship between outdoor 24-h average fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and high-frequency (HF) HRV that was consistent with our earlier Baltimore study for all but 2 days. These 2 days were the only days with significant precipitation in combination with elevated PM2.5. They were also unusual in that back-trajectory of their air masses was distinctly different from those on the other study days, emanating from the direction of rural Pennsylvania. Mixed-effects analysis for all 24 study days showed a small negative association of outdoor PM2.5 with HF HRV (-0.03 change in log[HF HRV] for a 10 micrograms/m3 increment in PM2.5) after adjustment for age, sex, cardiovascular status, trend, maximum temperature, average dew point temperature, random subject intercepts, and autocorrelated residuals. After excluding study days 4 and 5, this association was strengthened (-0.07 change in log[HF HRV] for 10 micrograms/m3 PM2.5, 95% CI -0.13 to -0.02) and was similar to that obtained in an earlier study (-0.12 change in log[HF HRV] for a 10 micrograms/m3 increment in outdoor PM2.5, 95% CI -0.24 to -0.00) [Liao D., Cai J., Rosamond W.D., Barnes R.W., Hutchinson R.G., Whitsel E.A., Rautaharju P., and Heiss G. Cardiac autonomic function and incident coronary heart disease: a population-based case-cohort study. The ARIC Study. Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study. Am J Epidemiol 1997: 145 (8): 696-706]. Acute (1 to 4 h) previous PM2.5 exposure did not have a stronger impact than the 24-h measure. A distributed lag model incorporating the six preceding 4-h means also did not indicate any effect greater than that observed in the 24-h measure. This study is consistent with earlier findings that exposures to PM2.5 are associated with decreased HRV in the elderly.
本研究调查了环境细颗粒物污染与老年人心脏自主神经控制受损之间的关系。1998年7月27日至8月22日,对马里兰州巴尔的摩县一个退休中心的56名老年(平均年龄82岁)非吸烟居民的心率变异性(HRV)进行了为期4周的监测。天气季节性温和(日平均温度63 - 84华氏度),细颗粒物(PM2.5)水平低至中度(PM2.5 < 50微克/立方米)。两组约30名受试者隔天接受检查。样条混合效应模型显示,室外24小时平均细颗粒物(PM2.5)与高频(HF)HRV之间存在负相关关系,除了2天之外,这与我们早期在巴尔的摩的研究一致。这2天是仅有的降水显著且PM2.5升高的日子。它们也很特别,因为其气团的后向轨迹与其他研究日明显不同,气团来自宾夕法尼亚农村地区的方向。对所有24个研究日进行的混合效应分析显示,在调整年龄、性别、心血管状况、趋势、最高温度、平均露点温度、随机受试者截距和自相关残差后,室外PM2.5与HF HRV存在小的负相关(PM2.5每增加10微克/立方米,log[HF HRV]变化 -0.03)。排除研究日4和5后,这种关联得到加强(PM2.5每增加10微克/立方米,log[HF HRV]变化 -0.07,95%置信区间 -0.13至 -0.02),且与早期研究结果相似(室外PM2.5每增加10微克/立方米,log[HF HRV]变化 -0.12,95%置信区间 -0.24至 -0.00)[廖D.、蔡J.、罗萨蒙德W.D.、巴恩斯R.W.、哈钦森R.G.、惠特塞尔E.A.、劳塔哈尔尤P.、海斯G. 心脏自主神经功能与冠心病发病:一项基于人群的病例队列研究。ARIC研究。社区动脉粥样硬化风险研究。《美国流行病学杂志》1997年;145(8):696 - 706]。之前急性(1至4小时)的PM2.5暴露影响并不比24小时测量结果更强。纳入前六个4小时平均值的分布滞后模型也未显示出比24小时测量结果更大的影响。本研究与早期研究结果一致,即老年人暴露于PM2.5与HRV降低有关。