| Literature DB >> 29367575 |
Cecilia Vecoli1, Silvia Pulignani2, Maria Grazia Andreassi3.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies strongly suggest that parental air pollutants exposure during the periconceptional period may play a major role in causing fetal/newborn malformations, including a frequent heterogeneity in the methods applied and a difficulty in estimating the clear effect of environmental toxicants. Moreover, only some couples exposed to toxicants during the pre-conception period give birth to a child with congenital anomalies. The reasons for such phenomena remain elusive but they can be explained by the individual, innate ability to metabolize these contaminants that eventually defines the ultimate dose of a biological active toxicant. In this paper, we reviewed the major evidence regarding the role of parental air pollutant exposure on congenital heart disease (CHD) risk as well as the modulating effect on detoxification systems. Finally, major epigenetic alterations induced by adverse environment contaminants have been revised as possible mechanisms altering a correct heart morphogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: air pollutions; congenital heart disease; epigenetics; individual susceptibility
Year: 2016 PMID: 29367575 PMCID: PMC5715723 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd3040032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Figure 1Genetic susceptibility and epigenetic mechanisms linking air pollution and congenital heart disease.
Overview of major epidemiological studies analyzing the impact of air pollution on congenital heart disease (CHD).
| Reference | Setting | Study Design | Air Pollutants Measured | Air Pollutants Found Associated with CHD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dadvand et al. 2011 [ | Northeast of UK 1993–2003 | Case-control, frequency matching | SO2, NO2, CO, PM10 | NO2, CO |
| Gilboa et al. 2005 [ | Texas, USA 1997–2000 | Case-control, frequency matching | SO2, NO2, CO, PM10 | SO2, CO, PM10 |
| Ritz et al. 2002 [ | California, USA 1987–1993 | Case-control, no matching | CO | CO |
| Strickland et al. 2009 [ | Atlanta, USA 1986–2003 | Cohort | SO2, NO2, CO, PM10, PM2.5 | PM2.5, NO2 |
| Hansen et al. 2009 [ | Brisbane, Australia 1998–2004 | Case-control, individual matching | SO2, NO, CO, PM10 | |
| Schembari et al. 2013 [ | Barcelona, Spain 1994–2006 | Case-control, no matching | NO2, NOx, PM10, PM2.5, PMcoarse | NO2, PMcoarse |
| Stingone et al. 2014 [ | Nine U.S.states 1997–2006 | Case-control, no matching | NO2, SO2, PM10, PM2.5, CO | NO2, PM2.5, |
| Padula et al. 2013 [ | California, USA 1997–2006 | Case-control, no matching | NO, NO2, PM10, PM2.5, CO | PM10, PM2.5 |
| Agay-Shay et al. 2013 [ | Tel-Aviv, Israel 2000–2006 | Case-control, no matching | NO2, SO2, PM10, PM2.5, CO | PM10 |
| Gianicolo et al. 2014 [ | Brindisi, Italy 2000–2010 | Case-control, individual matching | SO2 | SO2 |
| Dolk et al. 2010 [ | Wessex, North West Thamas, Oxford and Northern of UK 1991–1999 | Cohort | SO2, NO2, PM10 | SO2, PM10 |
| Kim et al. 2007 [ | Seoul, Korea 2001–2004 | Birth cohort | PM10 | PM10 |
| Dadvand et al. 2011 [ | Northeast of UK 1985–1996 | Case-control, frequency matching | SO2 |