Delfino Ralph J, Sioutas Constantinos, Malik Shaista
Epidemiology Division, Department of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92697-7550, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2005 Aug;113(8):934-46. doi: 10.1289/ehp.7938.
Numerous epidemiologic time-series studies have shown generally consistent associations of cardiovascular hospital admissions and mortality with outdoor air pollution, particularly mass concentrations of particulate matter (PM) < or = 2.5 or < or = 10 microm in diameter (PM2.5, PM10). Panel studies with repeated measures have supported the time-series results showing associations between PM and risk of cardiac ischemia and arrhythmias, increased blood pressure, decreased heart rate variability, and increased circulating markers of inflammation and thrombosis. The causal components driving the PM associations remain to be identified. Epidemiologic data using pollutant gases and particle characteristics such as particle number concentration and elemental carbon have provided indirect evidence that products of fossil fuel combustion are important. Ultrafine particles < 0.1 microm (UFPs) dominate particle number concentrations and surface area and are therefore capable of carrying large concentrations of adsorbed or condensed toxic air pollutants. It is likely that redox-active components in UFPs from fossil fuel combustion reach cardiovascular target sites. High UFP exposures may lead to systemic inflammation through oxidative stress responses to reactive oxygen species and thereby promote the progression of atherosclerosis and precipitate acute cardiovascular responses ranging from increased blood pressure to myocardial infarction. The next steps in epidemiologic research are to identify more clearly the putative PM casual components and size fractions linked to their sources. To advance this, we discuss in a companion article (Sioutas C, Delfino RJ, Singh M. 2005. Environ Health Perspect 113:947-955) the need for and methods of UFP exposure assessment.
众多流行病学时间序列研究表明,心血管疾病的住院率和死亡率与室外空气污染总体上存在一致的关联,尤其是直径小于或等于2.5微米或小于或等于10微米的颗粒物(PM)(PM2.5、PM10)的质量浓度。采用重复测量的专题研究支持了时间序列研究结果,即表明PM与心脏缺血和心律失常风险、血压升高、心率变异性降低以及炎症和血栓形成的循环标志物增加之间存在关联。导致PM关联的因果成分仍有待确定。利用污染物气体和颗粒特征(如颗粒数浓度和元素碳)的流行病学数据提供了间接证据,表明化石燃料燃烧产物很重要。直径小于0.1微米的超细颗粒物(UFPs)在颗粒数浓度和表面积中占主导地位,因此能够携带大量吸附或浓缩的有毒空气污染物。化石燃料燃烧产生的UFPs中的氧化还原活性成分很可能会到达心血管靶位点。高UFPs暴露可能通过对活性氧的氧化应激反应导致全身炎症,从而促进动脉粥样硬化的进展,并引发从血压升高到心肌梗死等急性心血管反应。流行病学研究的下一步是更明确地确定与来源相关的假定PM因果成分和粒径部分。为了推进这一工作,我们在一篇配套文章(Sioutas C, Delfino RJ, Singh M. 2005. Environ Health Perspect 113:947-955)中讨论了UFPs暴露评估的必要性和方法。