Endes Simon, Schaffner Emmanuel, Caviezel Seraina, Dratva Julia, Stolz Daiana, Schindler Christian, Künzli Nino, Schmidt-Trucksäss Arno, Probst-Hensch Nicole
Department of Sport, Exercise and Health, Div. Sports and Exercise Medicine, University of Basel, Switzerland.
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2017 Aug;220(6):1030-1038. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.06.001. Epub 2017 Jun 13.
Air pollution and insufficient physical activity have been associated with inflammation and oxidative stress, molecular mechanisms linked to arterial stiffness and cardiovascular disease. There are no studies on how physical activity modifies the association between air pollution and arterial stiffness. We examined whether the adverse cardiovascular effects of air pollution were modified by individual physical activity levels in 2823 adults aged 50-81 years from the well-characterized Swiss Cohort Study on Air Pollution and Lung and Heart Diseases (SAPALDIA).
We assessed arterial stiffness as the brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV [m/s]) with an oscillometric device. We administered a self-reported physical activity questionnaire to classify each subject's physical activity level. Air pollution exposure was estimated by the annual average individual home outdoor PM and PM (particulate matter <10μm and <2.5μm in diameter, respectively) and NO (nitrogen dioxide) exposure estimated for the year preceding the survey. Exposure estimates for ultrafine particles calculated as particle number concentration (PNC) and lung deposited surface area (LDSA) were available for a subsample (N=1353). We used mixed effects logistic regression models to regress increased arterial stiffness (baPWV≥14.4m/s) on air pollution exposure and physical activity while adjusting for relevant confounders.
We found evidence that the association of air pollution exposure with baPWV was different between inactive and active participants. The probability of having increased baPWV was significantly higher with higher PM, PM, NO, PNC and LDSA exposure in inactive, but not in physically active participants. We found some evidence of an interaction between physical activity and ambient air pollution exposure for PM, PM and NO (p=0.06, 0.09, and 0.04, respectively), but not PNC and LDSA (p=0.32 and 0.35).
Our study provides some indication that physical activity may protect against the adverse vascular effects of air pollution in low pollution settings. Additional research in large prospective cohorts is needed to assess whether the observed effect modification translates to high pollution settings in mega-cities of middle and low-income countries.
空气污染和身体活动不足与炎症及氧化应激相关,而炎症和氧化应激是与动脉僵硬度及心血管疾病相关的分子机制。目前尚无关于身体活动如何改变空气污染与动脉僵硬度之间关联的研究。我们在来自特征明确的瑞士空气污染与心肺疾病队列研究(SAPALDIA)的2823名50 - 81岁成年人中,研究了个体身体活动水平是否会改变空气污染对心血管的不良影响。
我们使用示波装置将肱踝脉搏波速度(baPWV [米/秒])作为动脉僵硬度的评估指标。我们发放了一份自我报告的身体活动问卷,以对每个受试者的身体活动水平进行分类。通过年度平均个体家庭室外PM和PM(分别为直径<10μm和<2.5μm的颗粒物)以及调查前一年估计的NO(二氧化氮)暴露量来估算空气污染暴露情况。对于一个子样本(N = 1353),可获得以颗粒数浓度(PNC)和肺部沉积表面积(LDSA)计算的超细颗粒暴露估计值。我们使用混合效应逻辑回归模型,在调整相关混杂因素的同时,将动脉僵硬度增加(baPWV≥14.4米/秒)与空气污染暴露和身体活动进行回归分析。
我们发现有证据表明,不活动和活动参与者中,空气污染暴露与baPWV的关联有所不同。在不活动参与者中,随着PM、PM、NO、PNC和LDSA暴露量增加,baPWV增加的概率显著更高,但在身体活动参与者中并非如此。我们发现身体活动与环境空气污染暴露之间在PM、PM和NO方面存在一些相互作用的证据(p分别为0.06、0.09和0.04),但在PNC和LDSA方面不存在(p分别为0.32和0.35)。
我们的研究提供了一些迹象表明,在低污染环境中,身体活动可能预防空气污染对血管的不良影响。需要在大型前瞻性队列中进行更多研究,以评估观察到的效应修饰是否适用于中低收入国家大城市的高污染环境。