Literature DB >> 17613081

Pinnacles and pitfalls for source apportionment of potential health effects from airborne particle exposure.

Thomas Grahame1, G M Hidy.   

Abstract

Since its origins in the 1970s, source apportionment using receptor modeling has improved to a point where both the chemical mass balance and various methods of factor analysis have been applied to many urban and regional data sets to infer major sources or source classes influencing airborne particle concentrations. Recently the factors from the latter analyses have been combined with regression techniques using human health endpoints to infer source influence on health effects. This approach is attractive for air quality management when the composition of particles is known, since it provides, in principle, a means of quantifying major source influence on health consequences. The factor-based analyses have been used for both epidemiological and toxicological studies with some success. While the method is useful in many ways, it also has important limitations that include failing to identify specific sources, misidentification from comingled source factors, and inconsistency or unreasonableness of results from the same locations using different factor techniques. Examples of ambiguities evolving from these limitations are cited in this article. Ambiguity found in the literature is fostered by loosely worded terminology that does not distinguish statistically based factors from actual sources, and from health impacts inferred by single centrally located air monitors, which are assumed to represent actual exposure or dosage to airborne particles.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17613081     DOI: 10.1080/08958370701399687

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inhal Toxicol        ISSN: 0895-8378            Impact factor:   2.724


  6 in total

Review 1.  Recent Approaches to Estimate Associations Between Source-Specific Air Pollution and Health.

Authors:  Jenna R Krall; Matthew J Strickland
Journal:  Curr Environ Health Rep       Date:  2017-03

2.  Assessment of heterogeneity of metal composition of fine particulate matter collected from eight U.S. counties using principal component analysis.

Authors:  Inkyu Han; Jana N Mihalic; Juan P Ramos-Bonilla; Ana M Rule; Lisa M Polyak; Roger D Peng; Alison S Geyh; Patrick N Breysse
Journal:  J Air Waste Manag Assoc       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 2.235

3.  Is ambient PM2.5 sulfate harmful?

Authors:  Thomas Grahame; Richard Schlesinger
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 9.031

4.  Secondary sulfate effects?

Authors:  Thomas Grahame; George M Hidy
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 9.031

5.  Classification and regression trees for epidemiologic research: an air pollution example.

Authors:  Katherine Gass; Mitch Klein; Howard H Chang; W Dana Flanders; Matthew J Strickland
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 5.984

6.  Statistical strategies for constructing health risk models with multiple pollutants and their interactions: possible choices and comparisons.

Authors:  Zhichao Sun; Yebin Tao; Shi Li; Kelly K Ferguson; John D Meeker; Sung Kyun Park; Stuart A Batterman; Bhramar Mukherjee
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2013-10-04       Impact factor: 5.984

  6 in total

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