Acute Adverse Effects of Fine Particulate Air Pollution on Ventricular Repolarization

ECU Author/Contributor (non-ECU co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
Wayne E. Cascio (Creator)
Fan He (Creator)
Xian Li (Creator)
Duanping Liao (Creator)
Sol Rodriguez-Colon (Creator)
Michele L. Shaffer (Creator)
Deborah L. Wolbrette (Creator)
Jeff Yanosky (Creator)
Institution
East Carolina University (ECU )
Web Site: http://www.ecu.edu/lib/

Abstract: Extracted text; Background The mechanisms for the relationship between particulate pollution and cardiac disease are not fully understood. Objective We examined the effects and time course of exposure to fine particulate matter = 2.5 µm in aerodynamic diameter (PM2.5) on ventricular repolarization of 106 nonsmoking adults who were living in communities in central Pennsylvania. Methods The 24-hr beat-to-beat electrocardiogram (ECG) data were obtained using a high-resolution 12-lead Holter system. After visually identifying and removing artifacts and arrhythmic beats, we summarized normal beat-to-beat QTs from each 30-min segment as heart rate (HR)-corrected QT measures: QT prolongation index (QTI), Bazett’s HR-corrected QT (QTcB), and Fridericia’s HR-corrected QT (QTcF). A personal PM2.5 monitor was used to measure individual-level real-time PM2.5 exposures for 24 hr. We averaged these data and used 30-min time-specific average PM2.5 exposures. Results The mean age of the participants was 56 ± 8 years, with 41% male and 74% white. The means ± SDs for QTI, QTcB, and QTcF were 111 ± 6.6, 438 ± 23 msec, and 422 ± 22 msec, respectively; and for PM2.5, the mean ± SD was 14 ± 22 µg/m3. We used distributed lag models under a framework of linear mixed-effects models to assess the autocorrelation-corrected regression coefficients (ß) between 30-min PM2.5 and the HR-corrected QT measures. Most of the adverse ventricular repolarization effects from PM2.5 exposure occurred within 3–4 hr. The multivariable adjusted ß (SE, p-value) due to a 10-µg/m3 increase in lag 7 PM2.5 on QTI, QTcB, and QTcF were 0.08 (0.04, p < 0.05), 0.22 (0.08, p < 0.01), and 0.09 (0.05, p < 0.05), respectively. Conclusions Our results suggest a significant adverse effect of PM2.5 on ventricular repolarization. The time course of the effect is within 3–4 hr of elevated PM2.5.

Additional Information

Publication
Other
Environmental Health Perspectives; 118:7 p. 1010-1015
Language: English
Date: 2010
Keywords
QT interval, autonomic modulation, cardiovascular disease, ventricular repolarization, particulate matter

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TitleLocation & LinkType of Relationship
Acute Adverse Effects of Fine Particulate Air Pollution on Ventricular Repolarizationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10342/5434The described resource references, cites, or otherwise points to the related resource.