Literature DB >> 20735151

An alternative form and level of the human health ozone standard.

Allen S Lefohn1, Milan J Hazucha, Douglas Shadwick, William C Adams.   

Abstract

Controlled human laboratory studies have shown that there is a disproportionately greater pulmonary function response from higher hourly average ozone (O3) concentrations than from lower hourly average values and thus, a nonlinear relationship exists between O3 dose and pulmonary function (FEV1) response. The nonlinear dose-response relationship affects the efficacy of the current 8-h O3 standard to describe adequately the observed spirometric response to typical diurnal O3 exposure patterns. We have reanalyzed data from five controlled human response to O3 health laboratory experiments as reported by Hazucha et al. (1992), Adams (2003, 2006a, 2006b), and Schelegle et al. (2009). These investigators exposed subjects to multi-hour variable/stepwise O3 concentration profiles that mimicked typical diurnal patterns of ambient O3 concentrations. Our findings indicate a common response pattern across most of the studies that provides valuable information for the development of a lung function (FEV1)-based alternate form for the O3 standard. Based on our reanalysis of the realistic exposure profiles used in these experiments, we suggest that an alternative form of the human health standard, similar to the proposed secondary (i.e., vegetation) standard form, be considered. The suggested form is an adjusted 5-h cumulative concentration weighted O3 exposure index, which addresses both the delay associated with the onset of response (FEV1 decrement) and the nonlinearity of response (i.e., the greater effect of higher concentrations over the mid- and low-range values) on an hourly basis.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20735151     DOI: 10.3109/08958378.2010.505253

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


  3 in total

1.  Tropospheric ozone assessment report: Global ozone metrics for climate change, human health, and crop/ecosystem research.

Authors:  Allen S Lefohn; Christopher S Malley; Luther Smith; Benjamin Wells; Milan Hazucha; Heather Simon; Vaishali Naik; Gina Mills; Martin G Schultz; Elena Paoletti; Alessandra De Marco; Xiaobin Xu; Li Zhang; Tao Wang; Howard S Neufeld; Robert C Musselman; David Tarasick; Michael Brauer; Zhaozhong Feng; Haoye Tang; Kazuhiko Kobayashi; Pierre Sicard; Sverre Solberg; Giacomo Gerosa
Journal:  Elementa (Wash D C)       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 6.053

2.  Context aware benchmarking and tuning of a TByte-scale air quality database and web service.

Authors:  Clara Betancourt; Björn Hagemeier; Sabine Schröder; Martin G Schultz
Journal:  Earth Sci Inform       Date:  2021-06-07       Impact factor: 2.705

3.  Comparing ozone metrics on associations with outpatient visits for respiratory diseases in Taipei Metropolitan area.

Authors:  Yu-Kai Lin; Shuenn-Chin Chang; Chitsan Lin; Yi-Chun Chen; Yu-Chun Wang
Journal:  Environ Pollut       Date:  2013-01-17       Impact factor: 8.071

  3 in total

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