Mirabelli Maria C, Vaidyanathan Ambarish, Flanders W Dana, Qin Xiaoting, Garbe Paul
Air Pollution and Respiratory Health Branch, National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2016 Dec;124(12):1882-1890. doi: 10.1289/EHP92. Epub 2016 Jul 6.
Relationships between air quality and health are well-described, but little information is available about the joint associations between particulate air pollution, ambient temperature, and respiratory morbidity.
We evaluated associations between concentrations of particulate matter ≤ 2.5 μm in diameter (PM2.5) and exacerbation of existing asthma and modification of the associations by ambient air temperature.
Data from 50,356 adult respondents to the Asthma Call-back Survey from 2006-2010 were linked by interview date and county of residence to estimates of daily averages of PM2.5 and maximum air temperature. Associations between 14-day average PM2.5 and the presence of any asthma symptoms during the 14 days leading up to and including the interview date were evaluated using binomial regression. We explored variation by air temperature using similar models, stratified into quintiles of the 14-day average maximum temperature.
Among adults with active asthma, 57.1% reported asthma symptoms within the past 14 days, and 14-day average PM2.5 ≥ 7.07 μg/m3 was associated with an estimated 4-5% higher asthma symptom prevalence. In the range of 4.00-7.06 μg/m3 of PM2.5, each 1-μg/m3 increase was associated with a 3.4% [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.1, 5.7] increase in symptom prevalence; across categories of temperature from 1.1 to 80.5°F, each 1-μg/m3 increase was associated with increased symptom prevalence (1.1-44.4°F: 7.9%; 44.5-58.6°F: 6.9%; 58.7-70.1°F: 2.9%; 70.2-80.5°F: 7.3%).
These results suggest that each unit increase in PM2.5 may be associated with an increase in the prevalence of asthma symptoms, even at levels as low as 4.00-7.06 μg/m3. Citation: Mirabelli MC, Vaidyanathan A, Flanders WD, Qin X, Garbe P. 2016. Outdoor PM2.5, ambient air temperature, and asthma symptoms in the past 14 days among adults with active asthma. Environ Health Perspect 124:1882-1890; http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP92.
空气质量与健康之间的关系已有充分描述,但关于颗粒物空气污染、环境温度与呼吸道发病率之间的联合关联的信息却很少。
我们评估了直径≤2.5μm的颗粒物(PM2.5)浓度与现有哮喘病情加重之间的关联,以及环境空气温度对这种关联的影响。
2006 - 2010年哮喘回访调查中50356名成年受访者的数据,通过访谈日期和居住县与PM2.5日均值及最高气温的估计值相关联。使用二项式回归评估14天平均PM2.5与访谈日期及之前14天内出现的任何哮喘症状之间的关联。我们使用类似模型按14天平均最高气温的五分位数分层,探讨温度变化的影响。
在患有活动性哮喘的成年人中,57.1%的人报告在过去14天内有哮喘症状,14天平均PM2.5≥7.07μg/m³与哮喘症状患病率估计高出4 - 5%相关。在PM2.5浓度为4.00 - 7.06μg/m³范围内,每增加1μg/m³与症状患病率增加3.4%[95%置信区间(CI):1.1,5.7]相关;在1.1至80.5°F的温度范围内,每增加1μg/m³与症状患病率增加相关(1.1 - 44.4°F:7.9%;44.5 - 58.6°F:6.9%;58.7 - 70.1°F:2.9%;70.2 - 80.5°F:7.3%)。
这些结果表明,即使在低至4.00 - 7.06μg/m³的水平,PM2.5每增加一个单位可能与哮喘症状患病率增加相关。引文:Mirabelli MC,Vaidyanathan A,Flanders WD,Qin X,Garbe P. 2016. 活动性哮喘成年人过去14天的室外PM2.5、环境空气温度与哮喘症状。环境健康展望124:1882 - 1890;http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP92 。