Suppr超能文献

美国城市社区国家研究中短期颗粒物成分暴露与死亡率的关系。

Short-term exposure to particulate matter constituents and mortality in a national study of U.S. urban communities.

机构信息

Department of Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

出版信息

Environ Health Perspect. 2013 Oct;121(10):1148-53. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1206185. Epub 2013 Aug 2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Although the association between PM2.5 mass and mortality has been extensively studied, few national-level analyses have estimated mortality effects of PM2.5 chemical constituents. Epidemiologic studies have reported that estimated effects of PM2.5 on mortality vary spatially and seasonally. We hypothesized that associations between PM2.5 constituents and mortality would not vary spatially or seasonally if variation in chemical composition contributes to variation in estimated PM2.5 mortality effects.

OBJECTIVES

We aimed to provide the first national, season-specific, and region-specific associations between mortality and PM2.5 constituents.

METHODS

We estimated short-term associations between nonaccidental mortality and PM2.5 constituents across 72 urban U.S. communities from 2000 to 2005. Using U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Chemical Speciation Network data, we analyzed seven constituents that together compose 79-85% of PM2.5 mass: organic carbon matter (OCM), elemental carbon (EC), silicon, sodium ion, nitrate, ammonium, and sulfate. We applied Poisson time-series regression models, controlling for time and weather, to estimate mortality effects.

RESULTS

Interquartile range increases in OCM, EC, silicon, and sodium ion were associated with estimated increases in mortality of 0.39% [95% posterior interval (PI): 0.08, 0.70%], 0.22% (95% PI: 0.00, 0.44), 0.17% (95% PI: 0.03, 0.30), and 0.16% (95% PI: 0.00, 0.32), respectively, based on single-pollutant models. We did not find evidence that associations between mortality and PM2.5 or PM2.5 constituents differed by season or region.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings indicate that some constituents of PM2.5 may be more toxic than others and, therefore, regulating PM total mass alone may not be sufficient to protect human health.

摘要

背景

虽然 PM2.5 质量与死亡率之间的关联已得到广泛研究,但很少有国家层面的分析估计 PM2.5 化学组分对死亡率的影响。流行病学研究报告称,PM2.5 对死亡率的估计影响在空间和季节上存在差异。我们假设,如果化学成分的变化导致 PM2.5 死亡率估计值的变化,那么 PM2.5 组分与死亡率之间的关联在空间或季节上不会发生变化。

目的

我们旨在提供与死亡率和 PM2.5 组分相关的第一个全国性、季节性和区域性关联。

方法

我们估计了 2000 年至 2005 年期间美国 72 个城市社区非意外死亡率与 PM2.5 组分之间的短期关联。使用美国环境保护署(EPA)化学分类网络数据,我们分析了组成 PM2.5 质量 79-85%的七种成分:有机碳物质(OCM)、元素碳(EC)、硅、钠离子、硝酸盐、铵和硫酸盐。我们应用泊松时间序列回归模型,同时控制时间和天气,来估计死亡率的影响。

结果

OCM、EC、硅和钠离子的四分位距增加分别与死亡率估计值增加 0.39%(95%置信区间(PI):0.08,0.70%)、0.22%(95% PI:0.00,0.44%)、0.17%(95% PI:0.03,0.30%)和 0.16%(95% PI:0.00,0.32%)相关,这是基于单污染物模型得出的结果。我们没有发现死亡率与 PM2.5 或 PM2.5 组分之间的关联因季节或地区而异的证据。

结论

我们的研究结果表明,PM2.5 的某些成分可能比其他成分更具毒性,因此,仅调节 PM2.5 总质量可能不足以保护人类健康。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d1fd/3801200/64a99692903e/ehp.1206185.g001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验