Title: Health Effects of Particulate Air Pollution
1Health Effects of Particulate Air Pollution
- Stuart L. Abramson, M.D., Ph.D.
- November 10, 2004
- Shell Center for Sustainability at Rice University
2www.epa.gov/nheerl/research/pm
- Research indicates that air pollution in the
form of particulate matter, or PM, at
concentrations currently allowed by national
standards (the National Ambient Air Quality
Standards, or NAAQS) is linked to thousands of
excess deaths and widespread health problems.
Part of the EPAs mission is to protect human
health by strengthening the scientific basis of
air quality regulations.
3PM Health Effects
- Some effects are known, others likely
unknownconsider the precautionary
principlemay be more effects seen with
ultrafine particles (lt0.1 microns) - Political and economic implications to be
considered
4Questions to answer
- Who? is affected
- Where? does exposure take place
- What? characterizes the particles involved
- When, Why and How? are certain health effects
seen (morbidity and mortality)
5Who is most sensitive to effects of PM?
- The youngest
- Minute ventilation standardized for body mass is
significantly greater in infancy (400 ml/min/kg)
and early childhood than in adults (150
ml/min/kg) radii of developing airways are
smaller and have less mature anti-oxidant and
detoxification capacity - The oldest
- Often due to chronic underlying disease (e.g.
lung, heart, diabetes) also less active repair
mechanisms in response to lung injury - Those of any age with chronic disease
- All in-between have been in the youngest category
and many will reach the oldest categorysoITS
EVERYONES PROBLEM
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8Locations of PM exposure
- Outdoors
- Indoors
- Miscellaneous indoor exposures (cigarettes,
candles, wood-burning stoves, fireplaces, etc.) - In vehicle in traffic
- Occupational exposures
- Hobbies
9Characterization of PM
- PM10 (coarse primarily oxides or salts of
elements found in dirte.g. Fe, Ca, Si, Al) - PM2.5(fine sulfates, nitrates, ammonium,
organic and elemental carbon, acid aerosols) - Ultrafine (lt100 nm)
- How does PM composition (including diesel exhaust
particles) in Houston differ from other areas?
10Heath Effects Indices
- General morbidity and mortality absenteeism, EC,
hospitalizations - Respiratory exacerbations (asthma, COPD,
bronchitis, emphysema) - Cardiovascular rhythm disturbances, vascular
changes (atherosclerosis, heart attacks) - Immunological/Cancer rates (HAPs, PAHs)
- Neuropsychological
- Reproductive (low birth weight)/Endocrinological
11Factors involved in the development of health
effects
- Amount of exposure
- Duration of exposure
- Co-exposures combinatorial effects?
- Constitutional factors (age, sex, ethnicity)
12Symptoms of PM exposure
- Shortness of breath
- Chest tightness
- Chest pain
- Palpitations
- Coughing
- Wheezing
- Fatigue
- Eye irritation
- Nasal irritation
- Throat irritation
- Headache
- Others (e.g. cognitive impairment)
13Health effects of particulate matter (PM) air
pollution
- Based on epidemiological studies others (e.g.
animal studies) - Respiratoryincrease in asthma attacks, COPD
exacerbations, decreased lung function,
bronchitis, and more allergic sensitization - Cardiovascularincreased risk of heart attack,
rhythm disturbances, vascular changes (increase
risk of stroke--Kuenzli et al. AHA Scientific
Session, November 20004, New Orleans) - Cancerincreased risk of lung cancer
14PM health effects
- Asthma and COPD exacerbations, decreased lung
function, bronchitis sx, effects on lung
development - Brunekeef B and ST Holgate, Lancet, 2002
- Gauderman WJ et al. N Eng J Med, 2004prevalence
of FEV1lt80 predicted was 4.9x greater in
subjects with high PM2.5 exposure from ages 10-18
years
15Selected Criteria Air Pollutants(with similar
effects on respiratory disease)
- Ozone
- Sulfur dioxide
- Nitrogen dioxide
- PM (2.5 or 10 microns)
- effects on asthma may include
- increased bronchial reflexes, analogous to
histamine or methacholine - increased inflammation
- enhancement of early or late phase response
- enhancement of sensitization to allergens
16Asthma Pathophysiology
Airway lumen narrowing
Epithelial damage
Mucous gland hypertrophyand hyperplasia
Airway smooth- muscle hypertrophy, hyperplasia,
and bronchoconstriction
Edema
Inflammatory cell infiltration
Mucushypersecretion
Vascular dilation
Thickening of basement membrane
Goblet cellhyperplasia
Adapted from Expert Panel Report. Guidelines for
the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma. NIH,
NHLBI. 1991. NIH publication 91-3042.
17Mechanisms for Effect of Cigarette Smoking on
Asthma
- Decreased airway caliber
- Decreased level of lung function
- Allergy
- Increased airway responsiveness
- Increased inflammatory markers
- Gene by environment interactions
18Cigarette smoke exposure
- Firsthand unfiltered toxic gaseous exposureget
rid of secondhand or passive label
19Emphysemamarked thinning of alveoli
20Rhinitis (allergic and other) may be associated
with the development of other diseases due to
common passageways
21PM health effects, cont.
- Increased heart rate, arrhythmias, cardiovascular
mortality - Dockery DW, Environ Health Perspect, 2001
22PM may narrow arteries
- Kuenzli et al. (2004) looked at a sample of 800
adults (at least 40 years old) via ultrasound of
carotid arteries - For every 10 point increase in PM2.5, carotid
arteries were 4 narrower - For women over 60, every 10 point increase led to
more than 15 narrowing - The above data suggest increased risk for stroke
with increased PM2.5 exposure
23www.epa.gov/pmresearch
24PM Health Effects--Numbers of interest
- In a 151 city study, a 10 microgram/cubic meter
increase in mean particulate matter resulted in a
4 increase in overall mortality, 6 increase in
cardiopulmonary mortality, and an 8 increase in
lung cancer mortality (Pope CA et al., JAMA 2002) - Comparative findings in a 20 city study, showing
0.51 increase in the relative rate of death from
1987-1994 for all causes and 0.68 increase in
death from cardiovascular and respiratory causes
for the same incremental increase in PM (Samet JM
et al., N Eng J Med, 2000)
25PM health effects, cont.
- Increased allergic sensitization (DEP)
- Reproductive effects (PAHs with low birth weight,
premature birthsmall effects) - Sram RJ Perera FP et al., Environ Health
Perspect, 1999
26Diesel Exhaust Particles and Asthma
- The combination of diesel exhaust particles and
specific allergens is synergistic in the
development of allergic sensitization and asthma
(Saxon and Diaz-Sanchez, Immunopharmacology,
2000)
27Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Metabolism
Casillas et al. , Annals of Allergy, Asthma,
Imm, 1999
28Typical diesel exhaust particle Casillas et
al., Ann All Asthma Immunol 1999
29Health Effects Reference for Houston,TX
- Assessment of Information Needs for Air
Pollution Health Effects Research in Houston,
Texas (2003) Report by BRIDGES to
Sustainability and Mickey Leland National Urban
Air Toxics Research Center to the Texas Council
on Environmental Technology, 67 pages. - www.bridgestos.org
30Environmental Health