| Literature DB >> 27285588 |
Gaurav S Ajmani1, Helen H Suh, Jayant M Pinto.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Olfactory dysfunction affects millions of people worldwide. This sensory impairment is associated with neurodegenerative disease and significantly decreased quality of life. Exposure to airborne pollutants has been implicated in olfactory decline, likely due to the anatomic susceptibility of the olfactory nerve to the environment. Historically, studies have focused on occupational exposures, but more recent studies have considered effects from exposure to ambient air pollutants.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27285588 PMCID: PMC5089874 DOI: 10.1289/EHP136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Search terms.
| Search terms and databases | Group A terms | Group B terms |
|---|---|---|
| MeSH terms PubMed only | Inhalation exposure | Olfaction disorders |
| Air pollution | Smell | |
| Air pollutants | Olfactory nerve diseases | |
| Olfactory pathways | ||
| Olfactory nerve | ||
| Keywords PubMed and Web of Science | Pollut* | Olfact* |
| “Environmental exposure”† | Smell | |
| “Odor identification”† | ||
| “Odor threshold”† | ||
| “Odor discrimination”† | ||
| *End-truncated search terms. †Terms entered into database with quotation marks to return results with exact matches. | ||
Summary of human epidemiologic studies of pollution and olfaction.
| Epidemiologic studies | Study population | Olfaction measure | Pollution measure | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hudson et al. 2006 | Convenience sample of Mexico City, Mexico residents ( | Odor ID and threshold using coffee and orange drink. Odor discrimination using horchata and atole. | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City residents assumed to have higher exposure than Tlaxcala residents. | Tlaxcala residents outperformed Mexico City residents at all three tasks. Differences limited to ages 20–49 years, but not in 50–63 years. |
| Guarneros et al. 2009 | Convenience sample of Mexico City, Mexico residents ( | Sniffin’ Sticks: odor ID, threshold, and discrimination. | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City residents assumed to have higher exposure than Tlaxcala residents. | Tlaxcala residents significantly outperformed Mexico City residents in threshold, discrimination, and sum of all 3 olfactory domains, but not in odor ID. |
| Calderón-Garcidueñas et al. 2010 (also a pathophysiologic study) | Convenience sample of Mexico City, Mexico residents (high exposure, | UPSIT | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City residents assumed to have higher exposure than Polotitlán residents. | Polotitlán residents outperformed Mexico City residents. |
| Sorokowska et al. 2013 | Convenience sample of Germany residents ( | Olfactory threshold testing. | Ambient air pollution. Germany residents assumed to have higher exposure than Tsimane’. | Tsimane’ outperformed Germany residents. |
| Sorokowska et al. 2015 | Convenience sample of Wroclaw, Poland residents ( | Olfactory threshold testing. | Ambient air pollution. Poland residents assumed to have higher exposure than Tsimane’ and Cook Islands residents. | Poland considered high exposure because it is an industrialized nation. Cook Islands residents outperformed residents of Poland and Tismane’. Tsimane’ outperformed residents of Poland. |
| Ranft et al. 2009 | Older German women 68–79 years old ( | Sniffin’ Sticks: odor ID. | PM10 at nearest pollution monitoring site. Motor vehicle exhaust measured as distance to nearest busy expressway. | PM10 not associated with olfaction. Motor vehicle exposure associated with significantly poorer olfaction in multivariate analysis. |
| Prah and Benignus 1979 | Convenience sample of male subjects ( | Olfactory threshold for butyl alcohol and acetic acid. | Exposed to 400 ppb O3 for 4 hr/day for 4 days. | Initially increased olfactory threshold (worsened olfaction), but this effect diminished by 3rd day of exposure. |
| Lucchini et al. 2012 | Convenience sample of children 11–14 years old in Valcomonica, Italy (area of ferroalloy plants, | Sniffin’ Sticks: odor ID. | Mn measured in air (personal samplers), soil, tap water, and in participant hair, blood, and urine. | Soil Mn associated with poorer olfaction, but airborne Mn and internal Mn not associated with olfaction. |
| Lucchini et al. 2014 | Convenience sample of elderly subjects 65–75 years old in Valcamonica, Italy (area of ferroalloy plants) and control locations ( | Sniffin’ Sticks: odor ID. | Mn measured in air (personal samplers), soil, tap water, and in participant blood and urine. | Soil and airborne Mn associated with poorer olfaction. |
| Guarneros et al. 2013 | Convenience sample of residents near a mining district in Hidalgo, Mexico ( | Sniffin’ Sticks: odor ID, threshold, and discrimination. | Mn. Hidalgo residents had higher exposure than Calnali residents based on hair samples. | Calnali residents significantly outperformed Hidalgo residents in all three olfactory domains. However, no dose–response between hair Mn and olfaction. |
| Grashow et al. 2015 | Elderly men near Boston, USA ( | UPSIT, given an average of 12 years after bone Pb measurement. | Pb measured in patella (cumulative 8–10 year exposure) and midtibial shaft (cumulative exposure over decades). | Tibial Pb significantly associated with poorer olfaction. Patella Pb associated with decreased UPSIT score, but this was nonsignificant. |
| Broder et al. 1988a | Survey study near Toronto, Canada of residents living in homes insulated with urea formaldehyde foam ( | Odor threshold for pyridine. | Formaldehyde, found to be higher in exposed homes than in control homes. | No significant differences in olfactory function between residents of exposed homes and control homes. |
| Fitzgerald et al. 2008 | Survey of older adults 55–74 years old from Fort Edward, Hudson Falls, and Glens Falls, New York, USA ( | UPSIT | PCBs measured in blood. | No association between serum PCB and olfactory function. |
| Fitzgerald et al. 2012 | Survey of older adults 55–74 years old from Fort Edward, Hudson Falls, and Glens Falls, New York, USA ( | UPSIT | PBDEs measured in blood. | No association between serum PBDE and olfactory function. |
| ID, identification; Mn, manganese; O3, ozone; Pb, lead; PBDEs, polybrominated diphenyl ethers; PCBs, polychlorinated biphenyls; ppb, parts per billion; UPSIT, University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test. | ||||
Summary of human pathophysiologic studies of pollution and olfaction.
| Pathophysiology Studies | Participants | Tissue analyzed | Pollution exposure | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calderón-Garcidueñas et al. 1998 | Young adults 19–35 years old from southwest Mexico City ( | Nasal biopsies: middle turbinate (representative of olfactory epithelium). | Ambient air pollution, particularly O3. Mexico City residents assumed to be higher exposed than Isla Mujeres residents. | Mexico City residents’ biopsies showed basal cell hyperplasia, squamous metaplasia, and epithelial dysplasia. Isla Mujeres residents had normal biopsies. |
| Calderón-Garcidueñas et al. 2004 | Residents of Mexico City and Monterrey ( | Brain tissue: olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves. | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City and Monterrey residents assumed to be higher exposed than Abasolo, Iguala, El Mante, Tlaxcala, and Veracruz residents. | Olfactory bulbs from all 3 Mexico City and Monterrey residents contained COX-2 and beta-amyloid, and olfactory nerves contained beta-amyloid. Neither control city residents’ olfactory tissues contained COX-2 or beta-amyloid. |
| Calderón-Garcidueñas et al. 2008 | Residents of Mexico City ( | Brain tissue: olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves. | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City residents assumed to be higher exposed than Tlaxcala and Veracruz residents. | Among Mexico City residents’ olfactory tissues, 4 contained PM, 6 contained beta-amyloid, and 3 contained α-synuclein, none of which were found in any control city residents’ brains. Mexico City residents’ olfactory tissues also had elevated COX-2, IL-1β, and CD14 compared to control city residents’ tissues. |
| Calderón-Garcidueñas et al. 2010 [also an epidemiologic study] | Mexico City, Mexico residents (high exposure, | Brain tissue: olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves. | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City residents assumed to be higher exposed than Polotitlán residents. | Among Mexico City residents’ olfactory tissues, 2 contained PM, 29 showed immunoreactivity to beta-amyloid, 5 contained beta-amyloid plaques and lipofuscin granules. Control city residents’ olfactory tissues were unremarkable. |
| Calderón-Garcidueñas et al. 2013 | Residents of Mexico City ( | Brain tissue: olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves. | Ambient air pollution. Mexico City residents assumed to be higher exposed than Tlaxcala and Veracruz residents. | Mexico City residents’ olfactory bulbs had higher COX-2 and IL-1β. No differences in DNA repair enzymes (LIG1, OGG1, XPA) between Mexico City and control city residents. Higher levels of Ni, Mn, and Cr in frontal lobes of Mexico City residents than of control city residents. |
| Note: COX-2, cyclooxygenase-2; Cr, chromium; IL-1β, interleukin 1 beta; LIG1, DNA ligase I; Ni, nickel; OGG1, 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase; XPA, xeroderma pigmentosum group A complementing protein. | ||||
Figure 1Summary of proposed mechanism of air pollution entry into olfactory tissues. (A) Passage of inhaled air through nasal cavities, including small airflow up to olfactory mucosa. (B) Passage of inhaled airborne pollutants through olfactory tissue: 1, uptake of pollutant by olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs); 2, translocation up OSNs’ axons (CN I) through cribriform plate to the olfactory bulb (OB); 3, uptake of pollutant within OB by 2° olfactory neurons; 4, translocation along 2° olfactory neurons to 1° olfactory cortex. Lightning bolts indicate sites of pollution-induced cellular stress, cytotoxicity, and inflammation.