Carll Alex P, Crespo Samir M, Filho Mauricio S, Zati Douglas H, Coull Brent A, Diaz Edgar A, Raimundo Rodrigo D, Jaeger Thomas N G, Ricci-Vitor Ana Laura, Papapostolou Vasileios, Lawrence Joy E, Garner David M, Perry Brigham S, Harkema Jack R, Godleski John J
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Physiology, Diabetes and Obesity Center, School of Medicine, University of Louisville, 580 South Preston Street, Delia Baxter Building, Room 404B, Louisville, KY, 40202, USA.
Part Fibre Toxicol. 2017 May 25;14(1):16. doi: 10.1186/s12989-017-0196-2.
Epidemiological studies have linked exposures to ambient fine particulate matter (PM) and traffic with autonomic nervous system imbalance (ANS) and cardiac pathophysiology, especially in individuals with preexisting disease. It is unclear whether metabolic syndrome (MetS) increases susceptibility to the effects of PM. We hypothesized that exposure to traffic-derived primary and secondary organic aerosols (P + SOA) at ambient levels would cause autonomic and cardiovascular dysfunction in rats exhibiting features of MetS. Male Sprague Dawley (SD) rats were fed a high-fructose diet (HFrD) to induce MetS, and exposed to P + SOA (20.4 ± 0.9 μg/m) for 12 days with time-matched comparison to filtered-air (FA) exposed MetS rats; normal diet (ND) SD rats were separately exposed to FA or P + SOA (56.3 ± 1.2 μg/m).
In MetS rats, P + SOA exposure decreased HRV, QTc, PR, and expiratory time overall (mean effect across the entirety of exposure), increased breathing rate overall, decreased baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) on three exposure days, and increased spontaneous atrioventricular (AV) block Mobitz Type II arrhythmia on exposure day 4 relative to FA-exposed animals receiving the same diet. Among ND rats, P + SOA decreased HRV only on day 1 and did not significantly alter BRS despite overall hypertensive responses relative to FA. Correlations between HRV, ECG, BRS, and breathing parameters suggested a role for autonomic imbalance in the pathophysiologic effects of P + SOA among MetS rats. Autonomic cardiovascular responses to P + SOA at ambient PM levels were pronounced among MetS rats and indicated blunted vagal influence over cardiovascular physiology.
Results support epidemiologic findings that MetS increases susceptibility to the adverse cardiac effects of ambient-level PM, potentially through ANS imbalance.
流行病学研究已将暴露于环境细颗粒物(PM)和交通环境与自主神经系统失衡(ANS)及心脏病理生理学联系起来,尤其是在已有疾病的个体中。尚不清楚代谢综合征(MetS)是否会增加对PM影响的易感性。我们假设,在环境水平下暴露于交通源一次和二次有机气溶胶(P + SOA)会导致表现出MetS特征的大鼠出现自主神经和心血管功能障碍。雄性斯普拉格-道利(SD)大鼠喂食高果糖饮食(HFrD)以诱导MetS,并暴露于P + SOA(20.4±0.9μg/m)12天,同时与暴露于过滤空气(FA)的MetS大鼠进行时间匹配对照;正常饮食(ND)的SD大鼠分别暴露于FA或P + SOA(56.3±1.2μg/m)。
在MetS大鼠中,暴露于P + SOA总体上降低了心率变异性(HRV)、QTc、PR和呼气时间,总体上增加了呼吸频率,在三个暴露日降低了压力反射敏感性(BRS),并且在暴露第4天相对于接受相同饮食的FA暴露动物增加了自发性房室(AV)阻滞莫氏II型心律失常。在ND大鼠中,P + SOA仅在第1天降低了HRV,尽管相对于FA总体上有高血压反应,但并未显著改变BRS。HRV、心电图、BRS和呼吸参数之间的相关性表明自主神经失衡在MetS大鼠中P + SOA的病理生理效应中起作用。在MetS大鼠中,环境PM水平下对P + SOA的自主心血管反应明显,表明迷走神经对心血管生理的影响减弱。
结果支持了流行病学研究结果,即MetS可能通过ANS失衡增加对环境水平PM不良心脏影响的易感性。