EFFECTS OF SINGLEDAY AND MULTIDAY OZONE EXPOSURES ON RESPIRATORY-FUNCTION IN ACTIVE NORMAL-CHILDREN

被引:74
作者
SPEKTOR, DM [1 ]
THURSTON, GD [1 ]
MAO, J [1 ]
HE, D [1 ]
HAYES, C [1 ]
LIPPMANN, M [1 ]
机构
[1] US EPA,HLTH EFFECTS RES LAB,RES TRIANGLE PK,NC 27711
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0013-9351(05)80167-7
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Ventilatory function was measured twice daily on 46 healthy children aged 8-14 years on at least 7 days for each child during a 4-week period at a northwestern New Jersey residential summer camp in 1988. The highest 1-hr O3 concentration was 150 ppb, while the highest 12-hr H+ concentration (as H2SO4) was 18.6 μg/m3. The highest temperature-humidity index was 81°F. The regressions of FVC, FEV1, FEF25-75, and PEFR on O3 in the hour preceding the afternoon function measurements yielded slopes essentially the same as those measured on other children at the same camp in 1984. Regressions of the changes in function between the late morning and late afternoon function measurements on average O3 concentration between them produced significant, but somewhat smaller effects, while regressions of morning function on O3 during the previous day indicated small but still significant effects. There were no significant correlations with other measured environmental variables including H+. Based on the results of this study and similar previous studies, we conclude that O3 exposures in ambient air produce greater lung function deficits in active young people in natural settings then does pure O3 in controlled chamber exposure studies because of: (1) longer exposures; (2) potentiation by other factors in the ambient exposures; (3) the persistence of effects from prior day's exposures; and (4) the persistence of a transient response associated with the daily peak of exposure. It follows that projections of likely effects in the real world from controlled chamber exposure studies should either have a large margin of safety, or the judgment of the extent of effects likely to occur among populations should be based directly on the effects observed in field studies. © 1991 Academic Press, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:107 / 122
页数:16
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]  
AVOL EL, 1985, AM REV RESPIR DIS, V132, P619
[2]   0.35 PPM O-3 EXPOSURE INDUCES HYPERRESPONSIVENESS ON 24-H REEXPOSURE TO 0.20 PPM O-3 [J].
BROOKES, KA ;
ADAMS, WC ;
SCHELEGLE, ES .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1989, 66 (06) :2756-2762
[3]   EXPOSURE OF HUMANS TO AMBIENT LEVELS OF OZONE FOR 6.6 HOURS CAUSES CELLULAR AND BIOCHEMICAL-CHANGES IN THE LUNG [J].
DEVLIN, RB ;
MCDONNELL, WF ;
MANN, R ;
BECKER, S ;
HOUSE, DE ;
SCHREINEMACHERS, D ;
KOREN, HS .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1991, 4 (01) :72-81
[4]  
FARRELL BP, 1979, AM REV RESPIR DIS, V119, P725
[5]   PULMONARY-FUNCTION AND SYMPTOM RESPONSES AFTER 6.6-HOUR EXPOSURE TO 0.12 PPM OZONE WITH MODERATE EXERCISE [J].
FOLINSBEE, LJ ;
MCDONNELL, WF ;
HORSTMAN, DH .
JAPCA-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AIR POLLUTION CONTROL AND HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT, 1988, 38 (01) :28-35
[6]   RESPIRATORY RESPONSES IN HUMANS REPEATEDLY EXPOSED TO LOW CONCENTRATIONS OF OZONE [J].
FOLINSBEE, LJ ;
BEDI, JF ;
HORVATH, SM .
AMERICAN REVIEW OF RESPIRATORY DISEASE, 1980, 121 (03) :431-439
[7]  
FOLINSBEE LJ, 1989, ATMOSPHERIC OZONE RE, P483
[8]   ADAPTATION TO SHORT-TERM RESPIRATORY EFFECTS OF OZONE IN MEN EXPOSED REPEATEDLY [J].
HACKNEY, JD ;
LINN, WS ;
MOHLER, JG ;
COLLIER, CR .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1977, 43 (01) :82-85
[9]  
HAZUCHA M J, 1990, American Review of Respiratory Disease, V141, pA71
[10]   MECHANISM OF ACTION OF OZONE ON THE HUMAN-LUNG [J].
HAZUCHA, MJ ;
BATES, DV ;
BROMBERG, PA .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1989, 67 (04) :1535-1541