| Literature DB >> 34414347 |
Jianzhao Bi1, Vaughn Barry2, Ethel J Weil3, Howard H Chang4, Stefanie Ebelt2.
Abstract
Toxicological evidence has shown that fine particulate matter (PM2.5) may affect distant organs, including kidneys, over the short term. However, epidemiological evidence is limited.Entities:
Keywords: Criteria gases; Distributed lags; PM2.5 components; PM2.5 total mass; Renal diseases; Single-day lags; Time-series
Year: 2021 PMID: 34414347 PMCID: PMC8367053 DOI: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Epidemiol ISSN: 2474-7882
Summary statistics for air pollution concentrations, meteorological parameter values, and ED visit counts for kidney diseases during the study period of 2002–2008 (2,557 days)
| Parameter | Mean | Standard deviation | Minimum | Maximum | IQR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fine particle components | 24-hour Avg PM2.5, μg/m3 | 15.41 | 7.12 | 2.46 | 61.28 | 8.99 |
| 24-hour Avg EC, μg/m3 | 1.10 | 0.59 | 0.14 | 4.53 | 0.68 | |
| 24-hour Avg OC, μg/m3 | 2.99 | 1.54 | 0.58 | 21.91 | 1.75 | |
| 24-hour Avg Sulfate, μg/m3 | 4.50 | 2.99 | 0.44 | 21.25 | 3.52 | |
| 24-hour Avg Nitrate, μg/m3 | 0.63 | 0.57 | 0.02 | 5.45 | 0.60 | |
| Criteria gases | 8-hour Max O3, ppb | 42.15 | 17.34 | 5.84 | 109.08 | 27.04 |
| 1-hour Max CO, ppm | 0.65 | 0.29 | 0.18 | 2.07 | 0.33 | |
| 1-hour Max SO2, ppb | 10.05 | 6.90 | 0.53 | 44.81 | 8.76 | |
| 1-hour Max NO2, ppb | 21.58 | 6.97 | 3.18 | 45.29 | 9.52 | |
| 1-hour Max NOx, ppb | 45.63 | 30.48 | 4.75 | 219.46 | 33.51 | |
| Meteorology | Dew-point temperature, °F | 49.85 | 16.49 | 2.30 | 74.50 | 27.40 |
| Maximum temperature, °F | 72.20 | 14.60 | 30.00 | 104.00 | 24.00 | |
| Minimum temperature, °F | 53.54 | 15.08 | 8.00 | 82.00 | 27.00 | |
| Kidney disease ED visits | All renal diseases, primary diagnosis, daily visit counts | 52.7 | 12.3 | 22.0 | 94.0 | 17.0 |
| All renal diseases, any diagnosis, daily visit counts | 119.9 | 30.5 | 52.0 | 216.0 | 47.0 | |
| Acute renal failure, primary diagnosis, daily visit counts | 6.3 | 3.8 | 0 | 23.0 | 6.0 | |
| Acute renal failure, any diagnosis, daily visit counts | 30.2 | 15.6 | 2.0 | 86.0 | 24.0 |
Figure 1.RR estimates of ED visits (any diagnosis) for all renal diseases associated with short-term air pollution exposure (A, fine particle components; B, criteria gases) with different lag structures (distributed lag [dist.] and single-day lags) in Atlanta during the period of 2002–2008.
Distributed lag RRs and 95% CIs of the associations between short-term exposure to air pollution and ED visits for kidney diseases
| Pollutant | IQR | All renal diseases, any diagnosis RR (95% CI) | All renal diseases, primary diagnosis RR (95% CI) | ARF, any diagnosis RR (95% CI) | ARF, primary diagnosis RR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fine particle components | |||||
| PM2.5 | 8.99 μg/m3 | 1.006 (0.991, 1.021) | 1.006 (0.985, 1.028) | 1.026 (0.997, 1.057) | 1.011 (0.950, 1.076) |
| EC | 0.68 μg/m3 | 1.016 (1.000, 1.031) | 1.016 (0.993, 1.040) | 1.032 (1.002, 1.063) | 1.024 (0.959, 1.093) |
| OC | 1.75 μg/m3 | 1.018 (1.003, 1.034) | 1.009 (0.987, 1.032) | 1.034 (1.005, 1.064) | 0.995 (0.935, 1.059) |
| Sulfate | 3.52 μg/m3 | 0.995 (0.981, 1.009) | 1.000 (0.981, 1.021) | 1.019 (0.991, 1.047) | 1.037 (0.978, 1.100) |
| Nitrate | 0.60 μg/m3 | 1.011 (0.993, 1.030) | 1.016 (0.989, 1.045) | 1.032 (0.996, 1.069) | 1.032 (0.954, 1.117) |
| Criteria gases | |||||
| O3 | 27.04 ppb | 1.004 (0.970, 1.040) | 0.986 (0.936, 1.037) | 1.078 (1.005, 1.158) | 1.054 (0.905, 1.227) |
| CO | 0.33 ppm | 1.019 (1.002, 1.037) | 1.013 (0.987, 1.039) | 1.028 (0.994, 1.063) | 1.025 (0.951, 1.105) |
| SO2 | 8.76 ppb | 1.002 (0.985, 1.020) | 1.018 (0.992, 1.044) | 1.013 (0.979, 1.047) | 1.024 (0.952, 1.101) |
| NO2 | 9.52 ppb | 1.018 (0.997, 1.039) | 1.022 (0.991, 1.054) | 1.018 (0.979, 1.059) | 1.013 (0.929, 1.105) |
| NOx | 33.51 ppb | 1.017 (0.999, 1.034) | 1.021 (0.995, 1.048) | 1.027 (0.993, 1.062) | 1.019 (0.946, 1.099) |
a0.05 ≤ P < 0.10.
bP < 0.05.
Figure 2.RR estimates of ED visits (any diagnosis) for ARF associated with short-term air pollution exposure (A, fine particle components; B, criteria gases) with different lag structures (distributed lag [dist.] and single-day lags) in Atlanta during the period of 2002–2008.