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Fine Particulate Constituents and Lung Dysfunction: A Time-Series Panel Study

Authors :
Min Zhou
Liping Qiao
Yuanlin Song
Yuchun Sun
Chunxue Bai
Yutong Gu
Cuicui Wang
Haidong Kan
Haiying Ji
Shujing Chen
Renjie Chen
Hongli Wang
Source :
Environmental Science & Technology. 51:1687-1694
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.

Abstract

The evidence is quite limited regarding the constituents of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) responsible for lung dysfunction. We designed a time-series panel study in 28 patients to examine the effects of 10 major constituents of PM2.5 on lung function with repeated daily measurements from December 2012 to May 2013 in Shanghai, China. We applied a linear mixed-effect model combined with a distributed lag model to estimate the cumulative effects of PM2.5 constituents on morning/evening forced expiratory volume in 1-s (FEV1) and peak expiratory flow (PEF) over a week. The cumulative decreases in morning FEV1, evening FEV1, morning PEF and evening PEF associated with an interquartile range (35.8 μg/m3) increase in PM2.5 concentrations were 33.49 [95% confidence interval(CI):2.45,54.53] mL, 16.80 (95%CI:3.75,29.86) mL, 4.48 (95%CI:2.30,6.66) L/min, and 1.31 (95%CI:-0.85,3.47) L/min, respectively. These results were not substantially changed after adjusting for gases in two-pollutant models. The associations o...

Details

ISSN :
15205851 and 0013936X
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Science & Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....09ef14e98b5fb8653325c9fb96bacc00