Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, School of Public Health, Box 357234, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, United States.
Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, School of Public Health, Box 357234, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, United States.
Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2020 Jan;223(1):187-198. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2019.09.003. Epub 2019 Sep 19.
BACKGROUND/AIM: Industrial-scale animal feeding operations (AFOs) have adverse impacts on regional air quality. Air emissions include endotoxins and other pro-inflammatory components, and exposure may cause airway inflammation and respiratory effects in susceptible individuals residing nearby. We aimed to develop and validate metrics for estimating time-varying exposure to AFO air pollution in surrounding communities and, secondly, to determine whether exposure is associated with health effects in children with asthma.
We conducted a longitudinal panel study of N = 58 children with asthma in an agricultural region of Washington State with a high density of dairy AFOs. Children were followed for up to 26 months with repeated measures of respiratory health (N = 2023 interviews; N = 3853 lung function measurements); urine was collected in a subcohort (N = 16) at six-day intervals over three months and analyzed for leukotriene E4 (LTE4), a biomarker of systemic inflammation (N = 138 measurements). We developed an approach to estimate daily exposure to AFO airborne emissions based on distance to AFOs, AFO size, and daily wind speed and direction, and validated the estimates against direct measurements of ammonia, a chemical marker of AFO emissions, measured biweekly at 18 sites across the region for 14 months. Short-term relationships between AFO pollutant exposure and outcomes were assessed using regression models accounting for within-participant correlation and several potential confounders.
Estimates of daily AFO air pollution correlated moderately well with outdoor ammonia measurements (N = 842; r = 0.62). Forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV) as percent of predicted was 2.0% (95% CI: 0.5, 3.5) lower with each interquartile increase in previous day exposure, but no associations with asthma symptoms were observed. There was suggestive evidence that LTE4 concentrations were higher following days of elevated exposure to AFO emissions (p = 0.06).
A simple metric of time-varying exposure to AFO emissions was correlated with daily outdoor ammonia levels. Children with asthma may be adversely affected by exposure to AFO emissions.
背景/目的:工业规模的动物饲养场(AFO)对区域空气质量有不利影响。空气排放物包括内毒素和其他促炎成分,暴露于这些物质可能会导致附近易感个体的气道炎症和呼吸道效应。我们旨在开发和验证用于估计周围社区中 AFO 空气污染随时间变化的暴露的指标,其次是确定暴露是否与患有哮喘的儿童的健康影响有关。
我们对华盛顿州一个农业区的 58 名患有哮喘的儿童进行了一项纵向面板研究,该地区有高密度的奶牛 AFO。儿童最多随访 26 个月,进行了多次呼吸系统健康测量(N=2023 次访谈;N=3853 次肺功能测量);在三个月内以六天为间隔,从亚组中采集尿液(N=16),并进行分析以测量白三烯 E4(LTE4),这是全身炎症的生物标志物(N=138 次测量)。我们开发了一种基于距 AFO 的距离、AFO 大小以及每日风速和风向来估算每日 AFO 空气传播排放物的方法,并根据在该地区 18 个地点进行的为期 14 个月、每两周一次的氨化学标记物(AFO 排放物的化学标记物)的直接测量来验证这些估算值。使用考虑个体内相关性和几个潜在混杂因素的回归模型评估 AFO 污染物暴露与结果之间的短期关系。
每日 AFO 空气污染的估计值与户外氨测量值中度相关(N=842;r=0.62)。与前一天的暴露相比,每增加一个四分位间距,用力呼气量(FEV)占预计值的百分比就会降低 2.0%(95%CI:0.5,3.5),但未观察到与哮喘症状的关联。有迹象表明,在接触到 AFO 排放物的暴露水平升高的日子后,LTE4 浓度更高(p=0.06)。
一种简单的 AFO 排放随时间变化的暴露指标与每日户外氨水平相关。患有哮喘的儿童可能会因接触 AFO 排放物而受到不利影响。