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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Dec 2011
The response of children with asthma to ambient particulate is modified by tobacco smoke exposure.
- Erwin W Gelfand, Nathan Rabinovitch, Lori Silveira, and Matthew Strand.
- Division of Allergy/Immunology, Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO 80206, USA. rabinovitchn@njhealth.org
- Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.. 2011 Dec 15;184(12):1350-7.
RationaleAmbient particulate matter concentrations have been positively associated with urinary leukotriene E(4) (LTE(4)) levels and albuterol usage in children with asthma but interactions with environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure have not been demonstrated despite obvious exposure to both pollutants in an urban setting.ObjectivesTo assess the health effects of concurrent ETS and ambient particulate matter exposure in children with asthma.MethodsAlbuterol usage and LTE(4) levels were monitored in 82 urban schoolchildren with asthma over three consecutive fall to spring school periods. Concentrations of morning maximum ambient particulate matter <2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter (mmPM(2.5)) and urine cotinine levels were also measured daily.Measurements And Main ResultsAlbuterol usage and LTE(4) were related to mmPM(2.5) concentrations on days when urine cotinine levels were low (<10 ng/ml/mg creatinine); on these days, mean albuterol usage and LTE(4) increased up to 5 or 6% per 10 μg/m(3) increase in mmPM(2.5). In contrast, no significant relationship was observed when cotinine was high, although mean albuterol usage and LTE(4) levels were greater in this case. Model fits for LTE(4) levels as a function of mmPM(2.5) concentrations were improved when mmPM(2.5) concentrations were logged, suggesting a nonlinear dose-response relationship between particulate matter exposure concentrations and airway mediators of asthma, for which the relationship tends to flatten at higher concentrations.ConclusionsThis study suggests that ETS modifies the acute effects of low-level ambient PM(2.5) exposure on childhood asthma. This negative interaction, the smaller effect of particulate matter exposure in children exposed to higher ETS, may be related to a nonlinear dose-response relationship between asthma mediators and particulate exposures.
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