Department of Environmental Health, Exposure Epidemiology and Risk Program, Harvard School of Public Health, 401 Park Drive, Landmark Center, Suite 415, PO Box 15698, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2010 Sep 15;182(6):819-25. doi: 10.1164/rccm.200912-1797OC. Epub 2010 May 27.
Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), the recurrent episodic disruption of normal breathing during sleep, affects as much as 17% of U.S. adults, and may be more prevalent in poor urban environments. SDB and air pollution have been linked to increased cardiovascular diseases and mortality, but the association between pollution and SDB is poorly understood.
We used data from the Sleep Heart Health Study (SHHS), a U.S. multicenter cohort study assessing cardiovascular and other consequences of SDB, to examine whether particulate air matter less than 10 μm in aerodynamic diameter (PM(10)) was associated with SDB among persons 39 years of age and older.
Using baseline data from SHHS urban sites, outcomes included the following: the respiratory disturbance index (RDI); percentage of sleep time at less than 90% O(2) saturation; and sleep efficiency, measured by overnight in-home polysomnography. We applied a fixed-effect model containing a city effect, controlling for potential predictors. In all models we included both the 365-day moving averages of PM(10) and temperature (long-term effects) and the differences between the daily measures of these two predictors and their 365-day average (short-term effects).
In summer, increases in RDI or percentage of sleep time at less than 90% O(2) saturation, and decreases in sleep efficiency, were all associated with increases in short-term variation in PM(10). Over all seasons, we found that increased RDI was associated with an 11.5% (95% confidence interval: 1.96, 22.01) increase per interquartile range increase (25.5°F) in temperature.
Reduction in air pollution exposure may decrease the severity of SDB and nocturnal hypoxemia and may improve cardiac risk.
睡眠呼吸障碍(SDB)是指睡眠中正常呼吸反复中断,影响了美国多达 17%的成年人,且在贫困的城市环境中可能更为普遍。SDB 和空气污染与心血管疾病和死亡率的增加有关,但污染与 SDB 之间的关联尚未被充分理解。
我们利用美国多中心队列研究睡眠心脏健康研究(SHHS)的数据,该研究评估了 SDB 对心血管和其他方面的影响,以研究在年龄 39 岁及以上的人群中,小于 10 μm 的空气动力学直径的颗粒物(PM(10))是否与 SDB 有关。
使用 SHHS 城市站点的基线数据,评估了以下结果:呼吸干扰指数(RDI);睡眠时间低于 90%氧饱和度的百分比;以及通过夜间家庭多导睡眠图测量的睡眠效率。我们应用了一个包含城市效应的固定效应模型,控制了潜在的预测因素。在所有模型中,我们同时包含了 PM(10)和温度的 365 天移动平均值(长期影响),以及这两个预测因子的日变化与其 365 天平均值之间的差异(短期影响)。
在夏季,RDI 或睡眠时间低于 90%氧饱和度百分比的增加,以及睡眠效率的降低,均与 PM(10)短期变化的增加有关。在所有季节中,我们发现 RDI 的增加与温度每增加 1 个四分位距(25.5°F),RDI 增加 11.5%(95%置信区间:1.96,22.01)有关。
减少空气污染暴露可能会降低 SDB 和夜间低氧血症的严重程度,并改善心脏风险。