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Impact of personal and ambient-level exposures to nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter on cardiovascular function
Authors:Williams Ron  Brook Robert  Bard Robert  Conner Teri  Shin Hwashin  Burnett Richard
Affiliation:National Exposure Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA), Research Triangle Park, NC, USA. williams.ronald@epa.gov
Abstract:This work explored the association between nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and PM2.5 components with changes in cardiovascular function in an adult non-smoking cohort. The cohort consisted of 65 volunteers participating in the US EPA's Detroit Exposure and Aerosol Research Study (DEARS) and a University of Michigan cardiovascular sub-study. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), heart rate (HR), brachial artery diameter (BAD), brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) and nitroglycerin-mediated arterial dilatation (NMD) were collected by in-home examinations. A maximum of 336 daily environmental and health effect observations were obtained. Daily potassium air concentrations were associated with significant decreases in DBP (?0.0447 mmHg/ng/m3 ± 0.0132, p = 0.0016, lag day 0) among participants compliant with the personal monitoring protocol. Personal NO2 exposures resulted in significant changes in BAD (e.g., 0.0041 mm/ppb ± 0.0019, p = 0.0353, lag day 1) and FMD (0.0612 ± 0.0235, p = 0.0103, lag day 0) among other findings.
Keywords:air pollutant concentrations  exposure assessment  particulate matter  epidemiology
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