The German view: effects of nitrogen dioxide on human health--derivation of health-related short-term and long-term values |
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Authors: | Kraft Martin Eikmann Thomas Kappos Andreas Künzli Nino Rapp Regula Schneider Klaus Seitz Heike Voss Jens-Uwe Wichmann H Erich |
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Affiliation: | Ministry of the Environment and Conservation, Agriculture and Consumer Protection of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Düsseldorf, Germany. martin.kraft@munlv.nrw.de |
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Abstract: | The presented overview concerning health relevant effects caused by nitrogen dioxide (NO2) resumes the current state of results from animal experiments and human studies (epidemiology and short-term chambers studies). NO2 concentrations applied in animal experiments were mostly considerably higher than in ambient air. Therefore, short- and long-term limit values were derived from human data. Experimental studies conducted with humans demonstrate effects after short-term exposure to concentrations at or above 400 microg NO2/m3. Effects on patients with light asthma could not be observed after short-term exposure to concentrations below 200 microg/m3. On basis of epidemiological long-term studies a threshold below which no effect on human health is expected could not be specified. Two short-term limit values have been proposed to protect public health: a 1-h value of 100 microg/m3 and a 24-h mean value of 50 microg/m3. Due to the limitations of epidemiological studies to disentangle effects of single pollutants, a long-term limit value cannot be easily derived. However, applying the precautionary principle, it is desirable to adopt an annual mean of 20 microg NO2/m3 as a long-term mean standard to protect public health. |
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Keywords: | Nitrogen dioxide Air pollution Respiratory system Effect-concentration Short-term exposure Long-term exposure |
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