| Literature DB >> 29973251 |
Tianjia Guan1,2, Songhe Hu1, Yiqun Han1, Ruoyu Wang1, Qindan Zhu1, Yaoqian Hu1, Hanqing Fan1, Tong Zhu3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Facemasks are increasingly worn during air pollution episodes in China, but their protective effects are poorly understood. We aimed to evaluate the filtration efficiencies of N95 facemasks and the cardiopulmonary benefits associated with wearing facemasks during episodes of pollution.Entities:
Keywords: Airway inflammation; Ambient particulate matter; Endothelial dysfunction; Filtration efficiency; N95 facemask; Oxidative stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29973251 PMCID: PMC6032602 DOI: 10.1186/s12989-018-0266-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Characteristics of the 15 study participants
| Parameter | Mean (±standard deviation) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 20.0 (±1.0) |
| Weight (kg) | 56.2 (±7.0) |
| Height (cm) | 169.0 (±7.0) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 19.1 (±2.0) |
| Sex (male/female) | 7/8 |
Fig. 1Timetable of the subjects and the average PM2.5 concentration during the visits
Mean Concentrations of pollutants during the 2-h walk in the two visits
| Pollutants | Concentration (Min-Max, SD) |
|---|---|
| PM2.5, μg/m3 | 204.0 (101.0–326.6, 58.5) |
| CO, ppm | 3.6 (1.5–6.1, 1.3) |
| O3, ppb | 5.4 (0.1–36.1, 8.2) |
| SO2, ppb | 37.2 (14.0–69.0, 15.1) |
| NO, ppb | 65.5 (30.0–290.0, 51.2) |
| NOx, ppb | 122 (46.5–563.5, 57.4) |
| Temperature, °C | 0.3 (−2–3,1.56) |
| Relative Humidity,% | 58.3 (38–81,16.6) |
PM2.5 particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm, CO carbon monoxide, O3 ozone, SO2 sulfur dioxide, NO nitric oxide, NOx nitrogen oxides
Fig. 2Experimental setup for measuring filter efficiencies of N95 facemasks with the headform based on particle number in ambient air. Key facial parameters of a medium-size headform in China include face length (122 mm), face width (145 mm), and interpupillary distance (62.5 mm) [24]
Fig. 3Filtration efficiency of 5.6–560 nm particles in ambient air of six N95 facemask types. Here the filtration efficiency is defined as proportion of particles that cannot go through the filters. The total efficiency of each N95 facemask for particles between 5.6 and 560 nm is listed on the top right corner of each graph.
Fig. 4Biomarker concentrations of the subjects in 4 tests. 1*: pre-exposure; 2*: 15-min post-exposure; 3*: 6-h post-exposure; 4*: 24-h post-exposure
Fig. 5Mean changes of biomarkers (95% CI) compared to the pre-exposure (1st) test in the subjects. * Significantly different from baseline in the group wearing real facemasks, p < 0.005
† Significantly different from baseline in the group wearing sham facemasks, p < 0.005.
§Significantly different between the groups wearing real and sham facemasks in the test, p < 0.005.