Short-term air pollution exposures and responses in Los Angeles area schoolchildren
Autor: | W S, Linn, D A, Shamoo, K R, Anderson, R C, Peng, E L, Avol, J D, Hackney, H, Gong |
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Rok vydání: | 1996 |
Předmět: |
Male
Analysis of Variance Likelihood Functions Time Factors Nitrogen Dioxide Environmental Exposure Respiration Disorders Health Surveys California Respiratory Function Tests Cross-Sectional Studies Ozone Air Pollution Epidemiological Monitoring Humans Regression Analysis Female Longitudinal Studies Seasons Particle Size Sex Distribution Child Environmental Health Weather Environmental Monitoring |
Zdroj: | Journal of exposure analysis and environmental epidemiology. 6(4) |
ISSN: | 1053-4245 |
Popis: | We studied 269 school children from three Southern California communities of contrasting air quality in two successive school years, to investigate short-term effects of ambient ozone (O3), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), or particulate matter (PM) on respiratory health. We measured lung function and symptoms twice daily for one week each in fall, winter and spring; and concurrently assessed time-activity patterns and personal exposures. Average daily personal exposures correlated with pollutant concentrations at central sites (r = 0.61 for O3, 0.63 for NO2, 0.48 for PM). Questionnaire-reported outdoor activity increased slightly in communities/seasons with higher pollution. Lung function differences between communities were explainable by age differences. Morning forced vital capacity (FVC) decreased significantly with increase in PM or NO2 measured over the preceding 24 hours. Morning-to-afternoon change of forced expired volume in one second (FEV1) became significantly more negative with increase in PM, NO2, or O3 on the same day. Predicted FVC or FEV1 loss on highest- vs lowest-pollution days was2%. Daily symptoms showed no association with current or prior 24-hour pollution, but increased with decreasing temperature. Parents' questionnaire responses suggested excess asthma and allergy in children from one polluted community while children in the other polluted community reported more symptoms, relative to the cleaner community. We conclude that Los Angeles area children may experience slight lung function changes in association with day-to-day air quality changes, reasonably similar to responses seen by others in less polluted areas. Although short-term pollution effects appear small, they should be assessed in longitudinal lung function studies when possible, to allow maximally accurate measurement of longer-term function changes. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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