The Department of Population Health and Data Sciences, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin, United States; The School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University, United States.
The Department of Statistics and Data Sciences, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin, United States.
Environ Res. 2024 Sep 15;257:119346. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2024.119346. Epub 2024 Jun 3.
Asthma exacerbations are an important cause of emergency department visits but much remains unknown about the role of environmental triggers including viruses and allergenic pollen. A better understanding of spatio-temporal variation in exposure and risk posed by viruses and pollen types could help prioritize public health interventions.
Here we quantify the effects of regionally important Cupressaceae pollen, tree pollen, other pollen types, rhinovirus, seasonal coronavirus, respiratory syncytial virus, and influenza on asthma-related emergency department visits for people living near eight pollen monitoring stations in Texas.
We used age stratified Poisson regression analyses to quantify the effects of allergenic pollen and viruses on asthma-related emergency department visits.
Young children (<5 years of age) had high asthma-related emergency department rates (24.1 visits/1,000,000 person-days), which were mainly attributed to viruses (51.2%). School-aged children also had high rates (20.7 visits/1,000,000 person-days), which were attributed to viruses (57.0%), Cupressaceae pollen (0.7%), and tree pollen (2.8%). Adults had lower rates (8.1 visits/1,000,000 person-days) which were attributed to viruses (25.4%), Cupressaceae pollen (0.8%), and tree pollen (2.3%). This risk was spread unevenly across space and time; for example, during peak Cuppressaceae season, this pollen accounted for 8.2% of adult emergency department visits near Austin where these plants are abundant, but 0.4% in cities like Houston where they are not; results for other age groups were similar.
Although viruses are a major contributor to asthma-related emergency department visits, airborne pollen can explain a meaningful portion of visits during peak pollen season and this risk varies over both time and space because of differences in plant composition.
哮喘恶化是导致急诊科就诊的一个重要原因,但对于环境触发因素(包括病毒和变应原花粉)的作用仍知之甚少。更好地了解病毒和花粉类型暴露和风险的时空变化,有助于优先考虑公共卫生干预措施。
本研究旨在量化德克萨斯州 8 个花粉监测站附近人群中,地区重要的柏科花粉、树木花粉、其他花粉类型、鼻病毒、季节性冠状病毒、呼吸道合胞病毒和流感对哮喘相关急诊科就诊的影响。
我们使用年龄分层泊松回归分析来量化变应原花粉和病毒对哮喘相关急诊科就诊的影响。
幼儿(<5 岁)的哮喘相关急诊科就诊率较高(24.1 次/100 万人群天),主要归因于病毒(51.2%)。学龄儿童的就诊率也较高(20.7 次/100 万人群天),主要归因于病毒(57.0%)、柏科花粉(0.7%)和树木花粉(2.8%)。成年人的就诊率较低(8.1 次/100 万人群天),主要归因于病毒(25.4%)、柏科花粉(0.8%)和树木花粉(2.3%)。这种风险在空间和时间上分布不均;例如,在柏科花粉高峰期,这种花粉在奥斯汀附近的成年人急诊科就诊中占 8.2%,而在休斯顿等这类植物不丰富的城市中占 0.4%;其他年龄组的结果类似。
尽管病毒是导致哮喘相关急诊科就诊的主要原因,但在花粉高峰期,空气传播花粉可以解释相当一部分就诊,而且由于植物组成的差异,这种风险在时间和空间上都有所变化。