Accelerated Lung Function Decline in Swine Confinement Workers
Autor: | Thomas S. Hurst, E. M. Barber, Chuck S. Rhodes, Shelly P. Kirychuk, Yuanhui Zhang, James A. Dosman, Ambikaipakan Senthilselvan |
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Rok vydání: | 1997 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Rural Population Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine Aging medicine.medical_specialty Vital capacity Longitudinal study Swine Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine Pulmonary function testing FEV1/FVC ratio Animals Humans Medicine Lung volumes Longitudinal Studies Animal Husbandry Lung business.industry Smoking Agriculture Middle Aged respiratory system Animal husbandry Saskatchewan Middle age Respiratory Function Tests respiratory tract diseases Surgery VEMS Edible Grain Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Demography |
Zdroj: | Chest. 111:1733-1741 |
ISSN: | 0012-3692 |
DOI: | 10.1378/chest.111.6.1733 |
Popis: | We conducted a longitudinal study to determine the annual rate decline in pulmonary function measurements in male swine confinement workers. For comparison, a grain farming group and a nonfarming rural-dwelling control group were also chosen for the longitudinal study. Two hundred seventeen swine confinement workers, 218 grain farmers, and 179 nonfarming control subjects had valid pulmonary function measurements at the baseline observation conducted in 1990 to 1991 and at the second observation conducted in 1994 to 1995. The swine confinement workers were younger (mean age=38.3+/-11.7 [SD] years) than the nonfarming control subjects (42.6+/-10.4 years) and the grain farmers (44.5+/-11.9 years). When stratified by age, nonfarming control subjects had the lowest mean annual rate decline in FEV1 and FVC in all age categories. The swine confinement workers had the largest annual rate decline in FEV1 and FVC, and this was most obvious in the middle age categories. After controlling for age, height, smoking, and baseline pulmonary function, swine confinement workers had excess annual decline of 26.1 mL in FEV1 (p=0.0005), 33.5 mL in FVC (p=0.0002), and 42.0 mL/s in forced expiratory flow between 25% and 75% of FVC (FEF[25-75%]) (p=0.02) over nonfarming control subjects. Grain farmers had excess annual decline of 16.4 mL in FEV1 (p=0.03), 26.7 mL in FVC (p=0.002), and 11.2 mL/s in FEF(25-75%) (p=0.38) over control subjects. These findings suggest that workers engaged in the swine industry and grain farmers appear prone to accelerated yearly losses in lung function and may therefore be at risk for the future development of chronic airflow limitation. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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