Coarse Particulate Matter (PM2.5 - 10) Affects Heart Rate Variability, Blood Lipids, and Circulating Eosinophils in Adults with Asthma
Author
Yeatts, Karin; Svendsen, Erik; Creason, John; Alexis, Neil E.; Herbst, Margaret C.; Scott, James; Kupper, Lawrence; Williams, Ronald W.; Neas, Lucas M.; Cascio, Wayne E.; Devlin, Robert B.; Peden, David B.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We investigated whether markers of airway and systemic inflammation, as well as heart rate variability (HRV) in asthmatics, change in response to fluctuations in ambient particulate matter (PM) in the coarse [PM with aerodynamic diameter 2.5 - 10 micrometer (PM2.5 - 10)] and fine (PM2.5) size range.
METHODS: Twelve adult asthmatics, living within a 30-mile radius of an atmospheric monitoring site in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, were followed over a 12-week period. Daily PM2.5 - 10 and PM2.5 concentrations were measured separately for each 24-hr period. Each subject had nine clinic visits, at which spirometric measures and peripheral blood samples for analysis of lipids, inflammatory cells, and coagulation-associated proteins were obtained. We also assessed HRV [SDNN24HR (standard deviation of all normal-to-normal intervals in a 24-hr recording), ASDNN5 (mean of the standard deviation in all 5-min segments of a 24-hr recording)] with four consecutive 24-hr ambulatory electrocardiogram measurements. Linear mixed models with a spatial covariance matrix structure and a 1-day lag were used to assess potential associations between PM levels and cardiopulmonary end points.
RESULTS: For a 1-microgram/m3 increase in coarse PM, SDNN24HR, and ASDNN5 decreased 3.36% (p = 0.02), and 0.77%, (p = 0.05) respectively. With a 1-microgram/m3 increase in coarse PM, circulating eosinophils increased 0.16% (p = 0.01), triglycerides increased 4.8% (p = 0.02), and very low-density lipoprotein increased 1.15% (p = 0.01). No significant associations were found with fine PM, and none with lung function.
CONCLUSION: These data suggest that small temporal increases in ambient coarse PM are sufficient to affect important cardiopulmonary and lipid parameters in adults with asthma. Coarse PM may have underappreciated health effects in susceptible populations. Originally published Environmental Health Perspectives, Vol. 115, No. 5, May 2007
Date
2007-05
Citation:
APA:
Yeatts, Karin, & Svendsen, Erik, & Creason, John, & Alexis, Neil E., & Herbst, Margaret C., & Scott, James, & Kupper, Lawrence, & Williams, Ronald W., & Neas, Lucas M., & Cascio, Wayne E., & Devlin, Robert B., & Peden, David B.. (May 2007).
Coarse Particulate Matter (PM2.5 - 10) Affects Heart Rate Variability, Blood Lipids, and Circulating Eosinophils in Adults with Asthma.
Environmental Health Perspectives,
115(5),
709-
714. Retrieved from
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3105
MLA:
Yeatts, Karin, and Svendsen, Erik, and Creason, John, and Alexis, Neil E., and Herbst, Margaret C., and Scott, James, and Kupper, Lawrence, and Williams, Ronald W., and Neas, Lucas M., and Cascio, Wayne E., and Devlin, Robert B., and Peden, David B..
"Coarse Particulate Matter (PM2.5 - 10) Affects Heart Rate Variability, Blood Lipids, and Circulating Eosinophils in Adults with Asthma". Environmental Health Perspectives.
115:5. (709-714),
May 2007.
September 30, 2023.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3105.
Chicago:
Yeatts, Karin and Svendsen, Erik and Creason, John and Alexis, Neil E. and Herbst, Margaret C. and Scott, James and Kupper, Lawrence and Williams, Ronald W. and Neas, Lucas M. and Cascio, Wayne E. and Devlin, Robert B. and Peden, David B.,
"Coarse Particulate Matter (PM2.5 - 10) Affects Heart Rate Variability, Blood Lipids, and Circulating Eosinophils in Adults with Asthma," Environmental Health Perspectives 115, no.
5 (May 2007),
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3105 (accessed
September 30, 2023).
AMA:
Yeatts, Karin, Svendsen, Erik, Creason, John, Alexis, Neil E., Herbst, Margaret C., Scott, James, Kupper, Lawrence, Williams, Ronald W., Neas, Lucas M., Cascio, Wayne E., Devlin, Robert B., Peden, David B..
Coarse Particulate Matter (PM2.5 - 10) Affects Heart Rate Variability, Blood Lipids, and Circulating Eosinophils in Adults with Asthma. Environmental Health Perspectives.
May 2007;
115(5):
709-714.
http://hdl.handle.net/10342/3105. Accessed
September 30, 2023.
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Publisher
East Carolina University