Department of Green Energy and Environmental Resources, Chang Jung Christian University, Tainan, Taiwan.
Department of Occupational and Safety and Health, Chang Jung Christian University, Tainan, Taiwan.
PLoS One. 2020 Aug 21;15(8):e0238082. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0238082. eCollection 2020.
The association between daily changes in ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and cardiovascular diseases have been well established in mechanistic, epidemiologic and exposure studies. Only a few studies examined the effect of hourly variations in air pollution on triggering cardiovascular events. Whether the current PM2.5 standards can protect vulnerable individuals with chronic cardiovascular diseases remain uncertain.
we conducted a time-stratified, case-crossover study to assess the associations between hourly changes in PM2.5 levels and the vascular disease onset in residents of Tainan City, Taiwan, visiting Emergency Room of Chi Mei Medical Center between January 2006 and December 2016. There were 26,749 cases including 10,310 females (38.5%) and 16,439 males (61.5%) identified. The time of emergency visit was identified as the onset for each case and control cases were selected as the same times on other days, on the same day of the week in the same month and year respectively. Residential address was used to identify the ambient air pollution exposure concentrations from the closest station. Conditional logistic regression with the stepwise selection method was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for the association.
When we only included cases occurring at PM2.5>10 μg/m3 and PM2.5>25 μg/m3, very significant ORs could be observed for 10 μg/m3 increases in PM2.5 at 0 and 1 hour, implying fine particulate exposure could promptly trigger vascular disease events. Moreover, a very clear increase in risk could be observed with cumulative exposure from 0 to 48 hours, especially in those cases where PM2.5>25 μg/m3.
Our study demonstrated that transient and low concentrations of ambient PM2.5 trigger adult vascular disease events, especially cerebrovascular disease, regardless of age, sex, and exposure timing. Warning and delivery systems should be setup to protect people from these prompt adverse health impacts.
在机制、流行病学和暴露研究中,已经充分证实了每日环境细颗粒物(PM2.5)变化与心血管疾病之间的关联。只有少数研究考察了空气污染每小时变化对引发心血管事件的影响。目前的 PM2.5 标准是否可以保护患有慢性心血管疾病的脆弱个体仍不确定。
我们进行了时间分层病例交叉研究,以评估台湾台南市居民每小时 PM2.5 水平变化与 2006 年 1 月至 2016 年 12 月期间奇美医疗中心急诊就诊的血管疾病发病之间的关联。共确定了 26749 例病例,包括 10310 名女性(38.5%)和 16439 名男性(61.5%)。急诊就诊时间被确定为每个病例的发病时间,而对照病例则选择在其他日期、同年同月同日的相同时间。住宅地址用于从最近的站点确定环境空气污染暴露浓度。使用逐步选择方法的条件逻辑回归来估计关联的调整比值比(OR)。
当我们仅包括 PM2.5>10μg/m3 和 PM2.5>25μg/m3 时发生的病例时,可以观察到 PM2.5 每增加 10μg/m3 在 0 小时和 1 小时时非常显著的 OR,这表明细颗粒物暴露可能会立即引发血管疾病事件。此外,可以观察到从 0 小时到 48 小时的累积暴露的风险明显增加,尤其是在 PM2.5>25μg/m3 的情况下。
我们的研究表明,环境 PM2.5 的短暂和低浓度会引发成人血管疾病事件,尤其是脑血管疾病,无论年龄、性别和暴露时间如何。应建立预警和传递系统,以保护人们免受这些即时的不良健康影响。