Zhang Yao, Ke Limei, Ma Xindong, Di Qian
Soochow College, Soochow University, Suzhou, 215006, China; Division of Sports Science & Physical Education, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China.
School of Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China.
Environ Res. 2023 Feb 1;218:115025. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.115025. Epub 2022 Dec 8.
Ozone exposure is associated with various adverse health outcomes, but its impact on sleep quality is uncertain. Here we assessed the causal effect of long-term (yearly and monthly) exposure to ozone on nocturnal workday sleep time in a national representative sample from the China Family Panel Study, using a difference-in-differences approach. We further followed ninety healthy Chinese young adults four times in four seasons from September 2020 to June 2021, measured their daily sleep architecture using accelerometers, ascertained daily ozone exposure, recorded 5-min eye-closed resting-state electroencephalogram (EEG) signals at the last day of each one-week-long measurement session, and explored the effect of ozone exposure on objectively-measured sleep architecture. In the national sample, we found that every 1 interquartile range (IQR) μg/m increase in yearly and monthly ozone exposure was causally associated with 7.31 (p = 0.0039) and 4.19 (p = 0.040) minutes decline in nocturnal workday sleep time; the dose-response curve represented a quasi-linear pattern with no safety threshold, and plateaued at higher concentrations. In the small-scale study with objectively-measured sleep architecture, we found that every 1 IQR μg/m increase in the weekly ozone exposure was associated with 5.33 min decrease in night-time total sleep time (p = 0.031), 1.63 percentage points decrease in sleep efficiency (p < 0.001), 1.99 min increase in sleep latency (p = 0.0070), and 5.34 min increase in wake after sleep onset time (p = 0.0016) in a quasi-linear pattern. Notably, we found the accumulating trend of ozone exposure on sleep quality during both the short-term and long-term periods. We also found that short-term ozone exposure was associated with altered EEG patterns, mediated by sleep quality. This study indicates that long-term and short-term ozone exposures have negative and accumulating impacts on sleep quality and might impair brain functioning. More hidden health burdens of ozone are worth exploring.
接触臭氧与多种不良健康后果相关,但其对睡眠质量的影响尚不确定。在此,我们采用差分法,在中国家庭追踪调查的全国代表性样本中,评估长期(按年和按月)接触臭氧对工作日夜间睡眠时间的因果效应。我们于2020年9月至2021年6月期间,在四个季节对90名健康的中国年轻成年人进行了四次随访,使用加速度计测量他们的每日睡眠结构,确定每日臭氧暴露量,在每个为期一周的测量阶段的最后一天记录5分钟闭眼静息状态脑电图(EEG)信号,并探讨臭氧暴露对客观测量的睡眠结构的影响。在全国样本中,我们发现,年和月臭氧暴露量每增加1个四分位间距(IQR)μg/m³,工作日夜间睡眠时间分别因果性减少7.31分钟(p = 0.0039)和4.19分钟(p = 0.040);剂量反应曲线呈准线性模式,无安全阈值,在较高浓度时趋于平稳。在客观测量睡眠结构的小规模研究中,我们发现,每周臭氧暴露量每增加1个IQR μg/m³,夜间总睡眠时间减少5.33分钟(p = 0.031),睡眠效率降低1.63个百分点(p < 0.001),入睡潜伏期增加1.99分钟(p = 0.0070),睡眠中觉醒时间增加5.34分钟(p = 0.0016),呈准线性模式。值得注意的是,我们发现短期和长期臭氧暴露对睡眠质量均有累积影响趋势。我们还发现,短期臭氧暴露与脑电图模式改变有关,且通过睡眠质量介导。本研究表明,长期和短期臭氧暴露均对睡眠质量有负面和累积影响,并可能损害脑功能。臭氧更多潜在的健康负担值得探索。