Carlsten Chris, Kaufman Joel D, Peretz Alon, Trenga Carol A, Sheppard Lianne, Sullivan Jeffrey H
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, 4225 Roosevelt Ave NE, University of Washington, Campus Box 354695, Seattle, WA 98195, United States.
Thromb Res. 2007;120(6):849-55. doi: 10.1016/j.thromres.2007.01.005. Epub 2007 Feb 23.
Ambient particulate matter (PM) is associated with cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. It has been proposed that PM induces a pro-thrombotic process, increasing the risk of cardiovascular events, with some support from epidemiological and laboratory-based models. Diesel exhaust is a major contributor to urban PM, and we conducted a controlled human exposure of diesel exhaust in healthy subjects.
To evaluate diesel exhaust exposure effects on fibrinolytic burden (D-dimer), platelet number, and endothelial injury (von Willebrand's factor, VWF), inhibition of the fibrinolytic pathway (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 [PAI-1]), and inflammation (C-reactive protein, CRP).
Randomized, crossover, double-blinded design, with 13 healthy participants exposed on three different days (>or=2 weeks washout) to diesel exhaust at 0 (filtered air), 100 microg PM(2.5)/m(3) and 200 microg PM(2.5)/m(3). We assessed diesel exhaust-associated changes in D-dimer, VWF, PAI-1 and platelets at 3, 6 and 22 h, and CRP at 22 h, after exposure initiation.
Significant changes did not occur in any primary endpoints. Among secondary endpoints, diesel exhaust (200 microg PM(2.5)/m(3)) effect on PAI-1 levels at 22 h was of borderline significance, with a 1.32-fold decrease after exposure to diesel exhaust (200 microg PM(2.5)/m(3)), relative to filtered air (CI 1.00 to 1.54). Diurnal patterns in D-dimer and PAI-1 were observed.
In healthy individuals, exposure to 200 microg PM(2.5)/m(3) diesel exhaust did not affect primary pro-thrombotic endpoints. Thus, these data do not support a diesel exhaust-induced pro-thrombotic phenomenon. Replication of these studies should be carried out to ascertain whether or not they inform our mechanistic understanding of air pollution's cardiovascular effects.
环境颗粒物(PM)与心血管疾病的发病率和死亡率相关。有人提出,PM会引发促血栓形成过程,增加心血管事件的风险,这在一定程度上得到了流行病学和基于实验室模型的支持。柴油废气是城市PM的主要来源,我们对健康受试者进行了柴油废气的人体对照暴露实验。
评估柴油废气暴露对纤溶负担(D-二聚体)、血小板数量以及内皮损伤(血管性血友病因子,VWF)、纤溶途径抑制(纤溶酶原激活物抑制剂-1 [PAI-1])和炎症(C反应蛋白,CRP)的影响。
采用随机、交叉、双盲设计,13名健康参与者在三个不同日期(洗脱期≥2周)分别暴露于0(过滤空气)、100微克PM2.5/立方米和200微克PM2.5/立方米的柴油废气中。在暴露开始后的3、6和22小时,我们评估了与柴油废气相关的D-二聚体、VWF、PAI-1和血小板的变化,并在22小时评估了CRP的变化。
任何主要终点均未出现显著变化。在次要终点中,柴油废气(200微克PM2.5/立方米)对22小时时PAI-1水平的影响具有临界显著性,与过滤空气相比,暴露于柴油废气(200微克PM2.5/立方米)后PAI-1水平下降了1.32倍(可信区间为1.00至1.54)。观察到了D-二聚体和PAI-1的昼夜变化模式。
在健康个体中,暴露于200微克PM2.5/立方米的柴油废气不会影响主要的促血栓形成终点。因此,这些数据不支持柴油废气诱导的促血栓形成现象。应重复进行这些研究,以确定它们是否有助于我们从机制上理解空气污染对心血管的影响。