Elderly have higher risk for cardiovascular,
respiratory disease.
Wednesday 15th March, 2006
New data from a
four-year study of 11.5 million Medicare enrollees show that short-term exposure
to fine particle
air pollution from such
sources as motor vehicle exhaust and power plant emissions significantly
increases the
risk for cardiovascular
and respiratory disease among people over 65 years of age. The study, funded by
the
National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, a component of the National Institutes of Health,
is the
largest ever conducted
on the link between fine particle air pollution and hospital admissions for
heart- and lungrelated
illnesses.
The study results show
that small increases in fine particle air pollution resulted in increased
hospital admissions
for heart and vascular
disease, heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and respiratory
infection.
"The data show that
study participants over 75 years of age experienced even greater increases in
admissions for
heart problems and
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease than those between 65 and 74 years of
age," said
National Institutes of
Health Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D.
The National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
provided
funding to researchers
at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health for the study. The study
results
are published in the
March 8, 2006 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
According to the study,
these findings document an ongoing threat from airborne particles to the health
of the
elderly, and provide a
strong rationale for setting a national air quality standard that is as
protective of their health
as possible.
"These findings provide
compelling evidence that fine particle concentrations well below the national
standard are
harmful to the
cardiovascular and respiratory health of our elderly citizens," said NIEHS
Director David A.
Schwartz, M.D. "Now that
the link between inhaled particles and adverse health effects has been
established, we
must focus our efforts
on understanding why these particles are harmful, and how these effects can be
prevented."
Fine particle air
pollution consists of microscopic particles of dust and soot less than 2.5
microns in diameter –
about thirty times
smaller than the width of a human hair. These tiny particles primarily come from
motor vehicle
exhaust, power plant
emissions, and other operations that involve the burning of fossil fuels. Fine
particles can
travel deep into the
respiratory tract, reducing lung function and worsening conditions such as
asthma and
bronchitis.
The researchers based
their fine particle analysis on 11.5 million Medicare enrollees who lived in 204
U.S.
counties with
populations larger than 200,000. Using billing records for 1999 to 2002, they
tracked daily counts of
hospital admissions for
eight major outcomes – heart failure, heart rhythm disturbances, cerebrovascular
events
such as stroke or brain
hemorrhage, coronary heart disease, peripheral vascular disease or narrowing of
the
blood vessels, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory infection, and injury.
The investigators
obtained daily measurements of fine particle concentrations from a network of
air monitoring
stations provided by the
Environmental Protection Agency's Aerometric Information Retrieval Service. The
average fine particle
concentration for the 204 counties over the three-year period was 13.4
micrograms per cubic
meter of air, slightly
below the national air quality standard of 15 micrograms per cubic meter for an
annual
average.
"When we analyzed the
data for heart failure, we observed a 1.28 percent increase in admissions for
each 10
microgram per cubic
meter increase in fine particle pollution," said Francesca Dominici, Ph.D., an
associate
professor of
biostatistics with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and lead
author on the study.
"Most of these
admissions increases occurred the same day as the rise in fine particle
concentration, which
suggests a short lag
time between the change in pollution and the subjects' response."
The data also showed
that the risk for air pollution-related cardiovascular disease was highest in
counties located
in the Eastern United
States. "Identifying the various factors that might contribute to these
differences between
eastern and western
regions is a very complex question that we must address," said Dominici.
According to Dominici,
fine particles pose a significant health problem because they penetrate deep
into the
lungs, and some may even
get into the bloodstream. "Now that we know that inhaled particles can affect
cardiovascular and
respiratory health, we must identify the specific characteristics of fine
particles that produce
these adverse health
effects," she said. "In the meantime, these findings underscore the need for a
national air
quality standard that
adequately protects the respiratory health of our citizens."
Sources
F. Dominici, D.
Peng, M. Bell, L. Pham, A. McDermott, S.L. Zeger, J.M. Samet. Fine Particulate
Air Pollution and Hospital Admissions for Cardiovascular and Respiratory
Diseases. Journal of American Medical Association 295