Schlesinger Richard B
Department of Biology and Health Sciences, Pace University, New York, New York 10038, USA.
Inhal Toxicol. 2007 Aug;19(10):811-32. doi: 10.1080/08958370701402382.
Ambient air particulate matter (PM) originates as either primary particles emitted directly into the atmosphere from a specific source or as secondary particles produced from atmospheric chemical reactions between precursor gases or between these gases and primary particles. PM can derive from both natural and anthropogenic sources, resulting in a complex chemical mix. The "fine" size mode of ambient PM, designated as PM(2.5), is defined as comprising those particles having aerodynamic diameters below 2.5 microm. While the total mass of PM(2.5) has been associated with adverse human health outcomes, the relationship between these and specific chemical components has not been resolved. This article provides a perspective on the current state of the science concerning health effects from a major group of chemical species found within PM(2.5), namely common inorganic constituents. The specific chemical classes discussed herein are secondary inorganic species, namely, sulfate, nitrate, and acidity, and generally crustal-derived species, namely, phosphate, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, silicon, and aluminum. The article discusses evidence for adverse health effects from inorganic PM(2.5) components within the framework of various caveats surrounding both epidemiology and toxicology assessments. The largest database exists for sulfate, but conclusions that attribute sulfate to health outcomes have not been consistent across all epidemiology studies, and there is a lack of coherence with toxicology studies, which show biological responses only at high levels of exposure. Limited epidemiological and toxicological data for nitrate suggests little or no adverse health effects at current levels. Epidemiological studies specifically identifying crustal components of PM(2.5) suggest that they are not likely, by themselves, to produce a significant health risk, and these components do not have unequivocal biological plausibility from toxicological studies for being significant contributors to adverse health outcomes.
环境空气中的颗粒物(PM)既可以是从特定来源直接排放到大气中的一次颗粒物,也可以是前驱气体之间或这些气体与一次颗粒物之间的大气化学反应产生的二次颗粒物。PM可源自自然和人为来源,形成复杂的化学混合物。环境PM的“细”粒径模式,即PM(2.5),定义为空气动力学直径小于2.5微米的那些颗粒。虽然PM(2.5)的总质量与不良的人类健康后果有关,但这些后果与特定化学成分之间的关系尚未明确。本文就PM(2.5)中发现的一大类化学物质(即常见无机成分)对健康影响的科学现状提供了一个视角。本文讨论的具体化学类别是二次无机物种,即硫酸盐、硝酸盐和酸度,以及一般源自地壳的物种,即磷酸盐、钠、钾、钙、镁、硅和铝。本文在围绕流行病学和毒理学评估的各种限制条件框架内讨论了无机PM(2.5)成分对健康产生不良影响的证据。关于硫酸盐的数据库最大,但将硫酸盐归因于健康结果的结论在所有流行病学研究中并不一致,并且与毒理学研究缺乏一致性,毒理学研究仅在高暴露水平下显示出生物学反应。关于硝酸盐的流行病学和毒理学数据有限,表明在当前水平下几乎没有或没有不良健康影响。专门识别PM(2.5)地壳成分的流行病学研究表明,它们本身不太可能产生重大健康风险,并且从毒理学研究来看,这些成分对于成为不良健康结果的重要促成因素没有明确的生物学合理性。