| Literature DB >> 35208563 |
Armand-Gabriel Rajnoveanu1, Ruxandra-Mioara Rajnoveanu2, Nicoleta Stefania Motoc3, Paraschiva Postolache4, Gabriel Gusetu5, Milena Adina Man3.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Smoking remains the most important risk factor, but occupational exposures may play an essential role as well. Firefighters are among occupations regularly exposed to a variety of irritative inhalational products, and they may be expected to develop respiratory health problems because of such an occupational exposure. To better understand and characterize this relationship, we performed an extensive search of the scientific literature, and we identified two major research areas: firefighters exposed to wildland fire smoke and firefighters involved in the World Trade Centre disaster-related operations. Most of the studies did not report a significant increase in COPD diagnosis in firefighters. An accelerated rate of decline in lung function was seen, a short time after major exposure events. This is the reason for an increased rate of exacerbations observed in individuals already diagnosed with obstructive respiratory disorders. A limited number of studies not covering these specific circumstances of exposure were found. They reported long-term morbidity and mortality data, and the results are controversial. Major confounding factors for most of the studies were the "healthy worker effect" and the lack of useful data regarding smoking habits. Efforts should be made in the future to better characterize specific biomarkers for the progression of COPD; to establish exposure limits; and to implement preventive strategies like rotation of workers, smoking cessation programs, and long-term monitoring programs for respiratory disorders.Entities:
Keywords: World Trade Center; biomarkers; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; exacerbations; firefighter; health status; lung function; occupational exposure; quality of life; wildland fire smoke
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35208563 PMCID: PMC8878660 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58020239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Studies addressing COPD diagnoses associated to wildland fire smoke exposure in firefighters.
| Article | Article Type | Sample Size | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burgess et al., 2004 [ | Original research | 1204 | Lung function and gene polymorphism |
| Hnizdo, 2012 [ | Original research | 965 | Effectiveness of long-term spirometry monitoring programs |
| Reid et al., 2016 [ | Review | - | Respiratory morbidity and mortality |
| Adetona et al., 2016 [ | Review | - | Health effects (including COPD) of WLF smoke |
| Betchley et al., 1997 [ | Original research | 76 | Cross-shift and cross-season respiratory effects |
| Jacquin et al., 2011 [ | Original research | 108 | Short-term respiratory effects in smokers vs. non-smokers |
| Adetona et al., 2011 [ | Original research | 24 | Cumulative exposure effects on lung function |
| Gaughan et al., 2008 [ | Original research | 58 | Acute respiratory effects |
| Liu et al., 1992 [ | Original research | 63 | Smoke effect on FEV1 and airway responsiveness |
Studies addressing COPD diagnoses associated to World Trade Centre Disaster in firefighters.
| Article | Article Type | Sample Size | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weakley et al., 2013 [ | Original research | 12,528 | Agreement between self-reported and medical records diagnoses |
| Webber et al., 2011 [ | Original research | 14,314 | Physician-diagnosed respiratory conditions |
| Weiden et al., 2013 [ | Original research | 1720 | Biomarkers for lung injury |
| Yip et al., 2016 [ | Original research | 2281 | 12-year post-exposure cumulative incidence of different health problems |
| Zeig-Owens et al., 2018 [ | Original research | 9434 | Long-term post-exposure decline in FEV1 |
| Singh et al., 2018 [ | Original research | 2137 | Predictors for asthma/COPD overlap |
| Putman et al., 2019 [ | Original research | 917 | Serum IgA level and airway injury |