Ambient air pollution and cerebrovascular disease mortality: an ecological time-series study based on 7-year death records in central China
2021
Yan, Yaqiong | Chen, Xi | Guo, Yan | Wu, Chuangxin | Zhao, Yuanyuan | Yang, Niannian | Dai, Juan | Gong, Jie | Xiang, Hao
Most studies of short-term exposure to ambient air pollution and cerebrovascular diseases focused on specific stroke-related outcomes, and results were inconsistent due to data unavailability and limited sample size. It is unclear yet how ambient air pollution contributes to the total cardiovascular mortality in central China. Daily deaths from cerebrovascular diseases were obtained from the Disease Surveillance Point System (DSPs) of Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention during the period from 2013 to 2019. Air pollution data were obtained from Wuhan Ecology and Environment Institute from 10 national air quality monitoring stations, including average daily PM₂.₅, PM₁₀, SO₂, NO₂, and O₃. Average daily temperature and relative humidity were obtained from Wuhan Meteorological Bureau. We performed a Poisson regression in generalized additive models (GAM) to examine the association between ambient air pollution and cerebrovascular disease mortality. We observed a total of 84,811 deaths from cerebrovascular diseases from 1 January 2013 to 31 December 2019 in Wuhan. Short-term exposure to PM₂.₅, PM₁₀, SO₂, and NO₂ was positively associated with daily deaths from cerebrovascular diseases, and no significant association was found for O₃. The largest effect on cerebrovascular disease mortality was found at lag0 for PM₂.₅ (ERR: 0.927, 95% CI: 0.749–1.105 per 10 μg/m3) and lag1 for PM₁₀ (ERR: 0.627, 95% CI: 0.493–0.761 per 10 μg/m³), SO₂ (ERR: 2.518, 95% CI: 1.914, 3.122 per 10 μg/m³), and NO₂ (ERR: 1.090, 95% CI: 0.822–1.358 per 10 μg/m³). The trends across lags were statistically significant. The stratified analysis demonstrated that females were more susceptible to SO₂ and NO₂, while elder individuals aged above 65 years old, compared with younger people, suffered more from air pollution, especially from SO₂. Short-term exposure to PM₂.₅, PM₁₀, SO₂, and NO₂ were significantly associated with a higher risk of cerebrovascular disease mortality, and elder females seemed to suffer more from air pollution. Further research is required to reveal the underlying mechanisms.
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