• Epidemiology · Jan 2004

    Ambient air pollution and cardiovascular emergency department visits.

    • Kristi Busico Metzger, Paige E Tolbert, Mitchel Klein, Jennifer L Peel, W Dana Flanders, Knox Todd, James A Mulholland, P Barry Ryan, and Howard Frumkin.
    • Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA. ptolber@sph.emory.edu
    • Epidemiology. 2004 Jan 1;15(1):46-56.

    BackgroundDespite evidence supporting an association between ambient air pollutants and cardiovascular disease (CVD), the roles of the physicochemical components of particulate matter (PM) and copollutants are not fully understood. This time-series study examined the relation between ambient air pollution and cardiovascular conditions using ambient air quality data and emergency department visit data in Atlanta, Georgia, from January 1, 1993, to August 31, 2000.MethodsOutcome data on 4,407,535 emergency department visits were compiled from 31 hospitals in Atlanta. The air quality data included measurements of criteria pollutants for the entire study period, as well as detailed measurements of mass concentrations for the fine and coarse fractions of PM and several physical and chemical characteristics of PM for the final 25 months of the study. Emergency department visits for CVD and for cardiovascular subgroups were assessed in relation to daily measures of air pollutants using Poisson generalized linear models controlling for long-term temporal trends and meteorologic conditions with cubic splines.ResultsUsing an a priori 3-day moving average in single-pollutant models, CVD visits were associated with NO2, CO, PM2.5, organic carbon, elemental carbon, and oxygenated hydrocarbons. Secondary analyses suggested that these associations tended to be strongest with same-day pollution levels.ConclusionsThese findings provide evidence for an association between CVD visits and several correlated pollutants, including gases, PM2.5, and PM2.5 components.

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