| Literature DB >> 25101773 |
Gordana Ristovska1, Helga Elvira Laszlo2, Anna L Hansell3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: High noise exposure during critical periods in gestation is a potential stressor that may result in increased risk of implantation failure, dysregulation of placentation or decrease of uterine blood flow. This paper systematically reviews published evidence on associations between reproductive outcomes and occupational and environmental noise exposure.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25101773 PMCID: PMC4143841 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph110807931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Summary of epidemiological studies of occupational noise exposure and reproductive outcomes (ordered by year of publication).
| Author, Year | Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Exposure Assessment | Outcome | Confounding Factors | Effect Size for Noise* | Quality Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mcdonald | Canada | Survey | 56,012 women | Subjective | Spontaneous abortion, (before 28th week of pregnancy) | Maternal age, education, smoking, parity, obstetric history, occupationla factors | O/E = 1.17; | 9 |
| McDonald | Canada | Survey | 22,761 live newborns | Subjective | LBW | Maternal age, education, ethnic group, gravidity, smoking, alcohol intake | O/E = 1.49 (
| 9 |
| Hartikainen-Sorri | Finland | Case-control study | 284 cases and 299 controls | Subjective | Preterm birth LBW | Socioeconomic factors, type of the work, occupational coexposures, smoking | RR = 0.7 (95% CI 0.1–3.4) | 9 |
| Nurminen | Finland | Case-control study | 1475 subjects | Subjective, Three groups exposed to Leq 80 dBA, 85 dBA and 90 dBA | Threatened abortion | Maternal age and weight, parity, smoking, alcohol intake | RR = 2.1 (95% CI 1.0–4.6) with shift work | 12 |
| Kurppa | Finland | Case-control study | 402 cases and 440 controls | Subjective, three groups exposed to Leq 80 dBA, 85dBA and 90dBA | Structural malformations | Socioeconomic factors, obstetric history, type of the work, occupational coexposures | OR=0.9 (95% CI 0.7–1.0) | 12 |
| Zhan | China | Case-control study | 978 cases and 402 controls | Objective, Three groups exposed to Leq = 85–94 dBA, 95–99 dBA, 100–104 dBA | Spontaneous abortion | Maternal age, occupational factors | 95–99 dBA OR = 2.2 | 13 |
| Zhang | China | Case-control study | 1875 cases and 1875 controls | Subjective | Small for gestational age | Gender, mother’s age, plurality, parity, coexposures to radiation, chemicals, pesticides | OR = 0.8 (95% CI 0.5–1.5) | 11 |
| Hartikainen | Finland | Prospective study | 111 exposed women and 181 unexposed women | Objective, cut off point for exposure | Low birthweight (LBW) | Socioeconomic factors, age, parity, marital status, smoking alcohol, type of the work | Decline in absolute birthweight, (mean 3304 g (SD 585) for the exposed | 9 |
| Luke | USA | Case-control study | 210 cases and 1260 controls | Subjective | Preterm births (<37 weeks) | Maternal age, race, education, marital status, smoking, occupational fatigue score | OR = 2 | 10 |
| Hrubá | Czech Republic | Case-control study | 3897 | Subjective | Intauterine growth retardation (IUGR) | Maternal age, education, smoking, shiftwork, standing, lifting, exposure to chemicals | OR = 1.9 | 11 |
| Chen | China | Case-control study | Subjective | LBW | Maternal age, education, occupation, smoking, alcohol intake, occupational coexposures | Estimated change in birthweight 14 | 10 | |
| Saurel-Cubizolles | European study | Case-control study | 5145 preterm and 7911 term births, | Subjective | Preterm birth (<37 weeks) | Maternal age, education, marital status, obstetric history, occupation, working conditions, occupational coexposures | OR = 0.99 | 10 |
| Magann | USA | Prospective study | 814 low risk healthy women | Objective, LAeq 8 h, cut off point for exposure was 85 dBA | Preterm birth | Maternal age, weight, education, family factors, occupational coexposures | OR = 0.8 (95% CI 0.1–2.9) | 13 |
| Croteau | Canada | Case-control study | 276 cases | Subjective | Small for gestational age (SGA) | Maternal age, weight, education, family factors, obstetric history, smoking, alcohol intake, occupational coexposures | OR = 1.2 (95% CI 1.0–1.5) | 11 |
Notes: OR (Odds Ratio), CI (Confidence Intervals), O/E (Observed/Expected); * results are reported to two decimal points except where original paper uses one decimal point.
Summary of epidemiological studies on environmental noise exposure and reproductive outcomes (ordered by year of publication).
| Author, Year | Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Exposure Assessment | Outcome | Confounfing Factors | Effect Size | Quality Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ando and Hattori, 1973 [ | Japan | Case-control study | 713 | Objective assessment, aircraft noise, ECPNL (dB) | LBW (<2500 g) | Gender, maternal age, occupation, parity | Higher rate of LBW in noisy area above 75 dBA | 8 |
| Ando and Hattori, 1977 [ | Japan | Case-control study | 343 cases and 112 controls | Objective assessment, aircraft noise, 75–95 dBA noise exposure | Human placental lactogen (HPL) levels in maternal serum | No confounders | Significant lower HPL level in noise exposed women after 32nd week of pregnancy | 9 |
| Edmonds | USA | Survey | 1745 birth defects | Objective assessment, aircraft noise, high noise level exposure above 65dBA Ldn | 17 categories of birth defects | Socioeconomic status, race | Non significant differences in rates of birth defects in exposed and nonexposed groups | 10 |
| Knipschild | Netherlands | Case-control study | 1840 | Objective assessment, | LBW | Gender, parental income | 18% LBW in low noise exposed group, 24% LBW in high noise exposed group, 29% in noise exposed above 70 dBA | 8 |
| Schell, 1981 [ | USA | Cross- sectional study | 115 | Objective assessment, aircraft noise, SEL = 75–100 dBA | Birthweight | Maternal age, obstetric history, parental weight and height, education, smoking, family income | r = −0.04 | 11 |
| Wu | Taiwan | Prospective study | 200 | Objective and subjective assessment, Leq24 hours | LBW | Maternal age, weight gain, gender and gestational age, socioeconomic status | Non-significant correlation between noise exposure and LBW | 13 |
| Matsui | Japan | Survey | 160,460 births | Objective assessment, aircraft noise, | LBW (<2500 g) | Gender, maternal age, socieocnomic status, live birth order | OR = 1.3 (95% CI = 1.1–1.4),
| 10 |
| Wang | China | Case-control study | 60 cases and 120 controls | Subjective assessment, residential noise exposure | Recurrent spontaneous abortion | Individual and family factors, other environmental factors | OR = 5.39 | 11 |
| Gehring | Canada | Retrospective study of birth records population based cohort study | 68,238 births | Objective, noise modeling | Preterm birth | Gender, ethnicity, parity, family income, education, smoking, air pollution | OR = 1.03 (95% CI 0.99–1.07) | 13 |
Notes: OR (Odds Ratio), CI (Confidence Intervals), ECPNL (Equivalent Continuous Perceived Noise Level), SEL (Sound Exposure Level), r (correlation coefficient), WECPNL (Weighted Equivalent Continuous Perceived Noise Level).