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Differential impact of acute fine particulate matter exposure on risk of stroke by stroke subtype, age, sex, and race: a case-crossover study

Authors :
Bhuiyan, Mohammad Alfrad Nobel
Brokamp, Cole
Madsen, Tracy E.
Khoury, Jane C.
Sucharew, Heidi
Alwell, Kathleen
Moomaw, Charles J.
Hossain, Monir
Flaherty, Matthew L.
Woo, Daniel
Mackey, Jason
La Rosa, Felipe De Los Rios
Martini, Sharyl
Ferioli, Simona
Adeoye, Opeolu
Kissela, Brett M.
Kleindorfer, Dawn
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objective: Association between acute ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5, aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 and cardiovascular events are well documented. However, it remains unclear whether acute exposure to PM2.5 acts as a trigger for hemorrhagic (intracerebral or subarachnoid hemorrhage) or non-hemorrhagic (infarct or transient ischemic attack) stroke onset. We, therefore, examined the association between ambient PM2.5 and stroke onset, and whether this relationship differs by stroke subtype, age, sex, and race. Methods: We used a time-stratified case-crossover design to examine the association between exposure to PM2.5 and stroke onset for the calendar year 2010. Data were collected from the Greater Cincinnati Northern Kentucky Stroke Study. We included patients 20 years and older, initially ascertained through hospital ICD-9 discharge codes. Daily ambient concentrations of PM2.5 were estimated from the patient's residential addresses using a spatiotemporal model. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that short-term PM2.5 exposure, particularly at three days before the event, is associated with stroke onset but varies according to stroke subtype, age, sex, and race.<br />Comment: One coauthor didnt want to submit the paper on the arxiv

Subjects

Subjects :
Statistics - Applications

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1912.09504
Document Type :
Working Paper