Archives of environmental health
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Arch. Environ. Health · Jan 1999
Health effects resulting from nitrogen dioxide exposure in an indoor ice arena.
We investigated an outbreak of acute respiratory illness among adolescent ice-hockey players in an indoor ice arena in Stockholm that had a propane-powered ice-resurfacing machine. We administered questionnaires to all players, as well as to a reference group that had played ice hockey in indoor arenas with electric ice-resurfacing machines. In the exposed group, 55 subjects (55.6%) experienced acute respiratory symptoms, compared with 4 (7.1%) in the reference group (relative risk = 7.8; 95% confidence interval = 3.0, 20.3). ⋯ Levels of nitrogen dioxide up to 2358 microg/m3 (1250 ppb) were detected during simulated conditions of the incident. The most likely cause of the outbreak was the high level of nitrogen dioxide that resulted from poor ventilation and a malfunctioning ice-resurfacing machine. Propane-fueled ice-resurfacing machines should not be used in indoor ice arenas.
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Arch. Environ. Health · May 1998
Association of ambient air quality with children's lung function in urban and rural Iran.
During the summer of 1994, a cross-sectional epidemiological study, in which the pulmonary function of children in Tehran was compared with pulmonary function in children in a rural town in Iran, was conducted. Four hundred children aged 5-11 y were studied. Daytime ambient nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and particulate matter were measured with portable devices, which were placed in the children's neighborhoods on the days of study. ⋯ Differences in spirometric lung function were not explained by nutritional status, as assessed by height and weight for age, or by home environmental exposures. Reported airway symptoms (i.e., cough, phlegm, and wheeze) were higher among rural children, whereas reported physician diagnosis of bronchitis and asthma were higher among urban children. The association between higher pollutant concentrations and reduced pulmonary function in this urban-rural comparison suggests that there is an effect of urban air pollution on short-term lung function and/or lung growth and development during the preadolescent years.
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Arch. Environ. Health · Jan 1998
Comparative StudyShort-term effects of air pollution on hospital admissions of respiratory diseases in Europe: a quantitative summary of APHEA study results. Air Pollution and Health: a European Approach.
The Air Pollution and Health: a European Approach (APHEA) project is a coordinated study of the short-term effects of air pollution on mortality and hospital admissions. Five West European cities (i.e., London, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Paris, Milano) contributed several years of hospital admissions data for all respiratory causes. In the current study, the authors describe the results obtained from the quantitative pooling (meta-analysis) of local analyses. ⋯ The ozone results were in good agreement with the results of similar U. S. studies. The coherence of the results of this study and other results gained under different conditions strengthens the argument for causality.
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Arch. Environ. Health · Sep 1997
Mineral particles in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF): an attempt at designing a quantitative model.
The author examined by morphology, chemical composition, and crystalline structure, approximately 2 500 mineral particles from bronchoalveolar lavage fluids obtained from 25 residents of Rome. In addition, the author obtained the same structural data for approximately 3000 inhalable particles present in the atmosphere in Rome. ⋯ Finally, the author compared the model with the particulate pattern observed in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples. Despite some drastic approximations, the model satisfactorily fits the data obtained from the experimental research on mineral particulate in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.
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Arch. Environ. Health · Nov 1993
Comparative StudyEffects of air pollution on children's pulmonary function in urban and suburban areas of Wuhan, People's Republic of China.
In May and June of 1988, the spirometric lung function of 604 children, who were aged 7-13 y and who were free of chronic respiratory conditions, was measured in the urban core and a suburb of Wuhan, China. During 1981-1988, ambient total suspended particulate (TSP) levels averaged 481 micrograms/m3 in the urban core and 167 micrograms/m3 in the suburb. In 1988, TSP levels, measured within 500 m of the children's homes, averaged 251 micrograms/m3 in the urban core and 110 micrograms/m3 in the suburb. ⋯ Rates of clinical upper respiratory irritation were also generally elevated in urban children. These results strongly suggest that urban ambient air pollution exposure in China contributes to retardation in the growth of children's lung function. Confirmatory longitudinal studies are in progress in Wuhan and three other Chinese cities.