Traffic-related air pollution and blood pressure in elderly subjects with coronary artery disease. Delfino, R., J., Tjoa, T., Gillen, D., L., Staimer, N., Polidori, A., Arhami, M., Jamner, L., Sioutas, C., & Longhurst, J. Epidemiology Cambridge Mass, 21(3):396-404, 5, 2010. Paper Website abstract bibtex BACKGROUND: Associations between blood pressure (BP) and ambient air pollution have been inconsistent. No studies have used ambulatory BP monitoring and outdoor home air-pollutant measurements with time-activity-location data. We address these gaps in a study of 64 elderly subjects with coronary artery disease, living in retirement communities in the Los Angeles basin. METHODS: Subjects were followed up for 10 days with hourly waking ambulatory BP monitoring (n = 6539 total measurements), hourly electronic diaries for perceived exertion and location, and real-time activity monitors (actigraphs). We measured hourly outdoor home pollutant gases, particle number, PM2.5, organic carbon, and black carbon. Data were analyzed with mixed models controlling for temperature, posture, actigraph activity, hour, community, and season. RESULTS: We found positive associations of systolic and diastolic BP with air pollutants. The strongest associations were with organic carbon (especially its estimated fossil-fuel- combustion fraction), multiday average exposures, and time periods when subjects were at home. An interquartile increase in 5-day average organic carbon (5.2 microg/m) was associated with 8.2 mm Hg higher mean systolic BP (95% confidence interval = 3.0-13.4) and 5.8 mm Hg higher mean diastolic BP (3.0-8.6). Associations of BP with 1-8 hour average air pollution were stronger with reports of moderate to strenuous physical exertion but not with higher actigraph motion. Associations were also stronger among 12 obese subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to primary organic components of fossil fuel combustion near the home were strongly associated with increased ambulatory BP in a population at potential risk of heart attack. Low fitness or obesity may increase the effects of pollutants.
@article{
title = {Traffic-related air pollution and blood pressure in elderly subjects with coronary artery disease.},
type = {article},
year = {2010},
identifiers = {[object Object]},
keywords = {Aged,Blood Pressure,Blood Pressure: drug effects,Blood Pressure: physiology,Coronary Artery Disease,Environmental Exposure,Environmental Exposure: adverse effects,Environmental Exposure: analysis,Female,Humans,Los Angeles,Male,Monitoring, Ambulatory,Vehicle Emissions,Vehicle Emissions: analysis,Vehicle Emissions: toxicity},
pages = {396-404},
volume = {21},
websites = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20335815},
month = {5},
institution = {Department of Epidemiology, School of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, CA 92617, USA. rdelfino@uci.edu},
id = {01e147e5-41ed-3ae1-b25a-37200eaf1f36},
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accessed = {2013-05-26},
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last_modified = {2014-11-19T06:03:46.000Z},
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abstract = {BACKGROUND: Associations between blood pressure (BP) and ambient air pollution have been inconsistent. No studies have used ambulatory BP monitoring and outdoor home air-pollutant measurements with time-activity-location data. We address these gaps in a study of 64 elderly subjects with coronary artery disease, living in retirement communities in the Los Angeles basin. METHODS: Subjects were followed up for 10 days with hourly waking ambulatory BP monitoring (n = 6539 total measurements), hourly electronic diaries for perceived exertion and location, and real-time activity monitors (actigraphs). We measured hourly outdoor home pollutant gases, particle number, PM2.5, organic carbon, and black carbon. Data were analyzed with mixed models controlling for temperature, posture, actigraph activity, hour, community, and season. RESULTS: We found positive associations of systolic and diastolic BP with air pollutants. The strongest associations were with organic carbon (especially its estimated fossil-fuel- combustion fraction), multiday average exposures, and time periods when subjects were at home. An interquartile increase in 5-day average organic carbon (5.2 microg/m) was associated with 8.2 mm Hg higher mean systolic BP (95% confidence interval = 3.0-13.4) and 5.8 mm Hg higher mean diastolic BP (3.0-8.6). Associations of BP with 1-8 hour average air pollution were stronger with reports of moderate to strenuous physical exertion but not with higher actigraph motion. Associations were also stronger among 12 obese subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to primary organic components of fossil fuel combustion near the home were strongly associated with increased ambulatory BP in a population at potential risk of heart attack. Low fitness or obesity may increase the effects of pollutants.},
bibtype = {article},
author = {Delfino, Ralph J and Tjoa, Thomas and Gillen, Daniel L and Staimer, Norbert and Polidori, Andrea and Arhami, Mohammad and Jamner, Larry and Sioutas, Constantinos and Longhurst, John},
journal = {Epidemiology Cambridge Mass},
number = {3}
}
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The strongest associations were with organic carbon (especially its estimated fossil-fuel- combustion fraction), multiday average exposures, and time periods when subjects were at home. An interquartile increase in 5-day average organic carbon (5.2 microg/m) was associated with 8.2 mm Hg higher mean systolic BP (95% confidence interval = 3.0-13.4) and 5.8 mm Hg higher mean diastolic BP (3.0-8.6). Associations of BP with 1-8 hour average air pollution were stronger with reports of moderate to strenuous physical exertion but not with higher actigraph motion. Associations were also stronger among 12 obese subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to primary organic components of fossil fuel combustion near the home were strongly associated with increased ambulatory BP in a population at potential risk of heart attack. Low fitness or obesity may increase the effects of pollutants.","bibtype":"article","author":"Delfino, Ralph J and Tjoa, Thomas and Gillen, Daniel L and Staimer, Norbert and Polidori, Andrea and Arhami, Mohammad and Jamner, Larry and Sioutas, Constantinos and Longhurst, John","journal":"Epidemiology Cambridge Mass","number":"3","bibtex":"@article{\n title = {Traffic-related air pollution and blood pressure in elderly subjects with coronary artery disease.},\n type = {article},\n year = {2010},\n identifiers = {[object Object]},\n keywords = {Aged,Blood Pressure,Blood Pressure: drug effects,Blood Pressure: physiology,Coronary Artery Disease,Environmental Exposure,Environmental Exposure: adverse effects,Environmental Exposure: analysis,Female,Humans,Los Angeles,Male,Monitoring, Ambulatory,Vehicle Emissions,Vehicle Emissions: analysis,Vehicle Emissions: toxicity},\n pages = {396-404},\n volume = {21},\n websites = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20335815},\n month = {5},\n institution = {Department of Epidemiology, School of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, CA 92617, USA. rdelfino@uci.edu},\n id = {01e147e5-41ed-3ae1-b25a-37200eaf1f36},\n created = {2014-06-01T21:16:03.000Z},\n accessed = {2013-05-26},\n file_attached = {true},\n profile_id = {9edae5ec-3a23-3830-8934-2c27bef6ccbe},\n group_id = {63e349d6-2c70-3938-9e67-2f6483f6cbab},\n last_modified = {2014-11-19T06:03:46.000Z},\n read = {true},\n starred = {false},\n authored = {false},\n confirmed = {false},\n hidden = {false},\n abstract = {BACKGROUND: Associations between blood pressure (BP) and ambient air pollution have been inconsistent. 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The strongest associations were with organic carbon (especially its estimated fossil-fuel- combustion fraction), multiday average exposures, and time periods when subjects were at home. An interquartile increase in 5-day average organic carbon (5.2 microg/m) was associated with 8.2 mm Hg higher mean systolic BP (95% confidence interval = 3.0-13.4) and 5.8 mm Hg higher mean diastolic BP (3.0-8.6). Associations of BP with 1-8 hour average air pollution were stronger with reports of moderate to strenuous physical exertion but not with higher actigraph motion. Associations were also stronger among 12 obese subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to primary organic components of fossil fuel combustion near the home were strongly associated with increased ambulatory BP in a population at potential risk of heart attack. 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