| Literature DB >> 29320852 |
Niya Zhou1, Changtan Jiang2, Qing Chen1, Huan Yang1, Xiaogang Wang1, Peng Zou1, Lei Sun1, Jiaojiao Liu2, Ling Li2, Lianbing Li3, Linping Huang1, Hongqiang Chen1, Lin Ao1, Ziyuan Zhou4, Jinyi Liu1, Zhihong Cui1, Jia Cao1.
Abstract
Studies have shown that the effects of ambient particulate matter (PM) may be related to particle's size. However, results on the relationships between different PM and reproductive health are controversial. To explore the impacts of various PM fractions on male reproductive health, a total of 796 eligible subjects recruited in 2013 baseline investigation. In addition, there were 656 (82.4%) and 568 (71.3%) subjects participated follow-up surveys in 2014 and 2015, respectively. We used multivariable regression analysis and mixed-effect model to investigate the associations between air pollutants PM10, PM10-2.5, and PM2.5 exposures and semen quality, sperm DNA fragmentation and serum reproductive hormones of subjects. In the preliminary regression analysis, PM10, PM10-2.5, and PM2.5 exposure all associated with sperm concentration, morphology, sperm high DNA stainability (HDS), serum estradiol and testosterone levels. However, in mixed models, we only found that PM10 exposure were negatively associated with sperm normal morphology (95% CI: -14.13, -24.47) but positively associated with sperm progressive motility (95% CI: 23.00, 8.49), and PM10-2.5 exposure was inversely associated with sperm concentration (95% CI: -9.06, -27.31) after multiplicity adjustment. Our results provide the evidence that air PM10 and PM10-2.5 exposures, not PM2.5, are risk factors of semen quality.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29320852 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b05206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028