| Literature DB >> 27192200 |
Euan R Tovey1, Damien Liu-Brennan1, Frances L Garden1,2,3, Brian G Oliver1,4, Matthew S Perzanowski5, Guy B Marks1,2,3.
Abstract
Allergic diseases such as asthma and rhinitis are common in many countries. Globally the most common allergen associated with symptoms is produced by house dust mites. Although the bed has often been cited as the main site of exposure to mite allergens, surprisingly this has not yet been directly established by measurement due to a lack of suitable methods. Here we report on the development of novel methods to determine the pattern of personal exposure to mite allergen bioaerosols over 24-hour periods and applied this in a small field study using 10 normal adults. Air was sampled using a miniature time-based air-sampler of in-house design located close to the breathing zone of the participants, co-located with a miniature time-lapse camera. Airborne particles, drawn into the sampler at 2L/min via a narrow slot, were impacted onto the peripheral surface of a disk mounted on the hour-hand of either a 12 or 24 hour clock motor. The impaction surface was either an electret cloth, or an adhesive film; both novel for these purposes. Following a review of the time-lapse images, disks were post-hoc cut into subsamples corresponding to eight predetermined categories of indoor or outdoor location, extracted and analysed for mite allergen Der p 1 by an amplified ELISA. Allergen was detected in 57.2% of the total of 353 subsamples collected during 20 days of sampling. Exposure patterns varied over time. Higher concentrations of airborne mite allergen were typically measured in samples collected from domestic locations in the day and evening. Indoor domestic Der p 1 exposures accounted for 59.5% of total exposure, whereas total in-bed-asleep exposure, which varied 80 fold between individuals, accounted overall for 9.85% of total exposure, suggesting beds are not often the main site of exposure. This study establishes the feasibility of novel methods for determining the time-geography of personal exposure to many bioaerosols and identifies new areas for future technical development and clinical applications.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27192200 PMCID: PMC4871444 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Images of the sampler and disk as used for particle collection.
(A) The sampler as worn on shoulder strap of a small backpack containing the airpump; the arrow indicates the location of the time-lapse camera. (B) Close-up of the sampler; the arrow indicates the inlet. (C) An adhesive disk following collection for approximately 11.5 hours. The large arrows indicate the green and red powder used to mark the start and stop of sampling and smaller white arrows indicate visible bands of dust particles impacted during periods of high exposure. The numbers on the inner face are used to visually check the process during sampling.
The relative quantities and rates of exposure in the eight categories of location encountered in the 24 hour period.
| No | Name of Category | Occurrence of each category (n) | Rate of exposure, pg/m3 (+/- 95% CI) | Geometric mean quantity of allergen collected in each category as a ratio of geometric mean of all other categories | Contribution of each category as a percentage of the total for the study | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ratio (+/- 95% CI) | p value | Time (%) | Quantity of allergen (%) | ||||
| 1 | Bedroom, sleeping | 75 | 16.39 (9.42–28.54) | 0.35 (0.24–0.52) | 0.000 | 30.40 | 9.85 |
| 2 | Bedroom, not-sleeping | 43 | 66.21 (34.56–126.83) | 1.91 (1.13–3.22) | 0.015 | 7.70 | 7.83 |
| 3 | House, not bedroom | 136 | 71.59 (41.48–123.57) | 2.59 (1.84–3.664) | 0.000 | 25.99 | 41.86 |
| 4 | Workplace/ Occupational | 63 | 29.64 (16.604–52.904) | 0.74 (0.47–1.18) | 0.206 | 12.99 | 12.33 |
| 5 | Public Building | 18 | 38.12 (16.13–90.08) | 1.02 (0.47–2.23) | 0.952 | 4.25 | 4.13 |
| 6 | Public Transport (Bus/Train/Ferry/Taxi) | 13 | 87.80 (32.22–239.25) | 2.48 (0.95–6.45) | 0.062 | 1.87 | 4.18 |
| 7 | Private Transport (Car) | 36 | 44.77 (22.647–88.52) | 1.23 (0.69–2.17) | 0.480 | 4.63 | 4.73 |
| 8 | Outdoors, and outdoor transport | 79 | 47.01 (27.421–80.58) | 1.36 (0.90–2.05) | 0.141 | 12.19 | 15.08 |
# p value from linear mixed regression model
Fig 2Plots of participant’s average exposures at discrete intervals over approximately 24 hours.
The times of sampling have been aligned; midnight is shown as the vertical heavy dotted line. A lighter dotted line is used to separate samples that had similar quantities of exposure. The plots are annotated to nominate some of the activities or places. Where an average exposure exceeded the Y axis, it is denoted as a number above the gap in the plotted line. (A) The exposures of participants number 1–8 who collected samples over a single day and night period. The asterisk, i.e., ‘*B/R’ indicates that the person was in the bedroom but not sleeping, e.g. on computer, reading etc. Note different participants have a Y axis (exposure) maxima varying from 250–2000 pg/m3. (B) The exposures during eight collection periods by participant 9. Two part-days are shown on a single graph separated by a horizontal line; a third part-day is not shown. (C) The exposures during four collections made by participant 10. Both (B) and (C) use a maximum value on the Y axis of 500 pg/m3. Additional details of locations are tabulated in S1 Table.