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Death by particles: the link between air pollution and fatal coronary heart disease in women.


A growing body of evidence links chronic exposure to air pollution--especially particulate matter (PM)--with mortality resulting from a variety of heart, lung, and respiratory diseases. A new study corroborates this association, and indicates that women may be at greater risk than men of fatal coronary heart disease coronary heart disease: see coronary artery disease.
coronary heart disease
 or ischemic heart disease

Progressive reduction of blood supply to the heart muscle due to narrowing or blocking of a coronary artery (see atherosclerosis).
 (CHD CHD coronary heart disease.

ChD
abbr.
Latin Chirurgiae Doctor (Doctor of Surgery)


CHD,
n.pr See disease, coronary heart.


CHD

canine hip dysplasia.
) as a result of exposure to airborne PM [EHP EHP
abbr.
1. effective horsepower

2. electric horsepower
 113:1723-1729]. When ozone ([O.sub.3]) or sulfur dioxide (S[O.sub.2]) is also present, women's risk appears even greater.

The study, by a team of epidemiologists at Loma Linda University Founded in 1905, Loma Linda University (LLU) is a private, Christian, coeducational, health sciences university located in Southern California 60 miles east of Los Angeles close to San Bernardino and near beaches, mountains, and the desert. , is part of the 22-year Adventist Health Study on the Health Effects of Smog. It followed 3,239 nonsmoking non·smok·ing  
adj.
1. Not engaging in the smoking of tobacco: nonsmoking passengers.

2. Designated or reserved for nonsmokers: the nonsmoking section of a restaurant.
, non-Hispanic white adults in several mainly urban areas in California from 1976 to 1998. The researchers associated CHD deaths with prior exposure to various levels of several common air pollutants: P[M.sub.2.5], P[M.sub.10-2.5], P[M.sub.10], [O.sub.3], S[O.sub.2], and nitrogen dioxide (N[O.sub.2]).

Participants completed a baseline health and lifestyle questionnaire in 1976, and four subsequent questionnaires covering personal sources of air pollution, such as secondhand tobacco smoke and fumes fumes

odorous gases and other volatile materials; inhalation of irritating fumes causes coughing and, if sufficiently severe, irreversible pulmonary edema.
 in the workplace. The researchers used airport visibility measurements (for P[M.sub.2.5] only) and data from state-run air pollution monitors (for all other pollutants) to estimate pollutant levels over time for the zip code centroids The following diagrams depict a list of centroids. A centroid of an object in  of participants' work sites and residences. Documented pollutant levels ranged from negligible to above legal limits. California's death certificate files and the National Death Index provided data on numbers and causes of deaths.

The researchers found that CHD caused 23.7% of all the deaths in the study cohort (155 women and 95 men). Adjusting for past smoking, body mass index, education level, frequency of eating meat, and calendar year (as PM levels declined over the study period), the researchers conducted statistical analyses to determine whether fatal CHD was associated with long-term exposure to the pollutants, either singly or in combinations of single gases and PM.

Women showed a relative risk for fatal CHD of 1.42, 1.38, and 1.22 with each increase of 10 micrograms per cubic meter ([micro]g/[m.sup.3]) of airborne P[M.sub.2 .5]' P[M.sub.10-25'] and P[M.sub.10], respectively, in the air pollution they encountered during the four years preceding death. Postmenopausal post·men·o·paus·al
adj.
Of or occurring in the time following menopause.


postmenopausal Change of life Gynecology adjective Referring to the time in ♀ when menstrual periods stop for ≥ 1 yr
 women showed higher relative risks of 1.49, 1.61, and 1.30 for each 10 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] increase in P[M.sub.2.5], P[M1.sub.10-2.5], and P[M.sub.10], respectively. Neither [O.sub.3], S[O.sub.2], nor N[O.sub.2] was associated with fatal CHD on its own. [O.sub.3] and to a lesser degree S[O.sub.2] (but not N[O.sub.2]) increased the effect of all sizes of PM. [O.sub.3] in conjunction with P[M.sub.2.5] yielded the most striking results: a relative risk of 5.0 in all women. Contrary to findings from several other studies that found increased risk of cardiopulmonary deaths due to PM in both genders, men showed no response to any of the pollutants.

The researchers highlight several physiological mechanisms that may explain their findings. Short-term exposure to PM is known to increase arrhythmia arrhythmia (ārĭth`mēə), disturbance in the rate or rhythm of the heartbeat. Various arrhythmias can be symptoms of serious heart disorders; however, they are usually of no medical significance except in the presence of , inflammation, and blood viscosity, and to decrease heart rate variability Heart rate variability (HRV) is a measure of variations in the heart rate. It is usually calculated by analysing the time series of beat-to-beat intervals from ECG or arterial pressure tracings. , among other adverse effects that could lead to fatal CHD. Other findings show that [O.sub.3] exposure increases lung permeability, perhaps easing PM's entry into the bloodstream. Finally, several studies have indicated that PM deposits differently--and perhaps more harmfully--in women's lungs than in men's. This may provide a starting point for teasing out the study's finding of an association between PM and risk of fatal CHD in women, but not in men.
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Title Annotation:Environews / Science Selections
Author:Kessler, Rebecca
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:642
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