Early Childhood Lower Respiratory Illness and Air Pollution

Background Few studies of air pollutants address morbidity in preschool children. In this study we evaluated bronchitis in children from two Czech districts: Teplice, with high ambient air pollution, and Prachatice, characterized by lower exposures. Objectives Our goal was to examine rates of lower respiratory illnesses in preschool children in relation to ambient particles and hydrocarbons. Methods Air monitoring for particulate matter < 2.5 μm in diameter (PM2.5) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) was conducted daily, every third day, or every sixth day. Children born May 1994 through December 1998 were followed to 3 or 4.5 years of age to ascertain illness diagnoses. Mothers completed questionnaires at birth and at follow-up regarding demographic, lifestyle, reproductive, and home environmental factors. Longitudinal multivariate repeated-measures analysis was used to quantify rate ratios for bronchitis and for total lower respiratory illnesses in 1,133 children. Results After adjustment for season, temperature, and other covariates, bronchitis rates increased with rising pollutant concentrations. Below 2 years of age, increments in 30-day averages of 100 ng/m3 PAHs and of 25 μg/m3 PM2.5 resulted in rate ratios (RRs) for bronchitis of 1.29 [95 % confidence interval (CI), 1.07–1.54] and 1.30 (95% CI, 1.08–1.58), respectively; from 2 to 4.5 years of age, these RRs were 1.56 (95% CI, 1.22–2.00) and 1.23 (95% CI, 0.94–1.62), respectively. Conclusion Ambient PAHs and fine particles were associated with early-life susceptibility to bronchitis. Associations were stronger for longer pollutant-averaging periods and, among children > 2 years of age, for PAHs compared with fine particles. Preschool-age children may be particularly vulnerable to air pollution–induced illnesses.

[1]  P. Loy International Classification of Diseases--9th revision. , 1978, Medical record and health care information journal.

[2]  B. Niggemann,et al.  Early childhood infectious diseases and the development of asthma up to school age: a birth cohort study , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[3]  M. Bobák,et al.  The effect of air pollution on infant mortality appears specific for respiratory causes in the postneonatal period. , 1999, Epidemiology.

[4]  D. Strachan,et al.  Health effects of passive smoking. 1. Parental smoking and lower respiratory illness in infancy and early childhood. , 1997, Thorax.

[5]  J. Lewtas,et al.  Teplice program--the impact of air pollution on human health. , 1996, Environmental health perspectives.

[6]  Impact of vaccines universally recommended for children--United States, 1990-1998. , 1999, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[7]  F. Perera,et al.  Prenatal Ambient Air Exposure to Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and the Occurrence of Respiratory Symptoms over the First Year of Life , 2005, European Journal of Epidemiology.

[8]  T Bellander,et al.  Traffic-related air pollution and respiratory health during the first 2 yrs of life , 2002, European Respiratory Journal.

[9]  J. Pinto,et al.  Spatial Variability of PM2.5 in Urban Areas in the United States , 2004, Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association.

[10]  M. Melbye,et al.  Risk factors for acute respiratory tract infections in young Greenlandic children. , 2003, American journal of epidemiology.

[11]  H. Akaike,et al.  Information Theory and an Extension of the Maximum Likelihood Principle , 1973 .

[12]  A. Nel,et al.  Chemicals in diesel exhaust particles generate reactive oxygen radicals and induce apoptosis in macrophages. , 1999, Journal of immunology.

[13]  Farid Salama,et al.  Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons , 1965, Nature.

[14]  J D Spengler,et al.  Respiratory health and PM10 pollution. A daily time series analysis. , 1991, The American review of respiratory disease.

[15]  A. Nel,et al.  Ultrafine particulate pollutants induce oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage. , 2002, Environmental health perspectives.

[16]  R. Lew,et al.  Effect of maternal cigarette smoking on pregnancy complications and sudden infant death syndrome. , 1995, The Journal of family practice.

[17]  R. Darnell,et al.  Consultations of children living near open-cast coal mines. , 2001, Environmental health perspectives.

[18]  D. Loomis,et al.  Air pollution and infant mortality in Mexico City. , 1999, Epidemiology.

[19]  Bert Brunekreef,et al.  Air pollution from traffic and the development of respiratory infections and asthmatic and allergic symptoms in children. , 2002, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[20]  Beate Ritz,et al.  Air Pollution and Infant Death in Southern California, 1989–2000 , 2006, Pediatrics.

[21]  R. Shumway,et al.  Air Pollution and Lymphocyte Phenotype Proportions in Cord Blood , 2005, Environmental health perspectives.

[22]  Beate Ritz,et al.  Effects of subchronic and chronic exposure to ambient air pollutants on infant bronchiolitis. , 2006, American journal of epidemiology.

[23]  K. Berhane,et al.  Effects of Ambient Air Pollutants on Asthma Medication Use and Wheezing among Fourth-Grade School Children from 12 Southern California Communities Enrolled in The Children's Health Study , 2004, Archives of environmental health.

[24]  T J Woodruff,et al.  The relationship between selected causes of postneonatal infant mortality and particulate air pollution in the United States. , 1997, Environmental health perspectives.

[25]  L. Rushton,et al.  Locally generated particulate pollution and respiratory symptoms in young children , 2006, Thorax.

[26]  F. Cassee,et al.  Ambient fine and coarse particle suppression of alveolar macrophage functions. , 2003, Toxicology letters.

[27]  P. Albert,et al.  Models for longitudinal data: a generalized estimating equation approach. , 1988, Biometrics.

[28]  J. R. Christian Respiratory diseases in children. , 1958, The South Dakota journal of medicine and pharmacy.

[29]  B. Brunekreef,et al.  Acute effects of urban air pollution on respiratory health of children with and without chronic respiratory symptoms. , 1999, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[30]  M. A. Lewis,et al.  Differences between child and parent reports of symptoms among Latino children with asthma. , 1998, Pediatrics.

[31]  Tanja Pless-Mulloli,et al.  Particulate Air Pollution and Fetal Health: A Systematic Review of the Epidemiologic Evidence , 2004, Epidemiology.

[32]  K. Koppová,et al.  Childhood respiratory symptoms, hospital admissions, and long-term exposure to airborne particulate matter* , 2001, Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology.

[33]  S. Tannenbaum,et al.  4-Aminobiphenyl hemoglobin adducts in fetuses exposed to the tobacco smoke carcinogen in utero. , 1991, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[34]  W. Morgan,et al.  The Tucson Children's Respiratory Study. I. Design and implementation of a prospective study of acute and chronic respiratory illness in children. , 1989, American journal of epidemiology.

[35]  J Schwartz,et al.  Is Air Pollution a Risk Factor for Low Birth Weight in Seoul? , 2001, Epidemiology.

[36]  F. Perera,et al.  Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, environmental tobacco smoke, and respiratory symptoms in an inner-city birth cohort. , 2004, Chest.

[37]  T. Lumley,et al.  A Case–Crossover Study of Wintertime Ambient Air Pollution and Infant Bronchiolitis , 2005, Environmental health perspectives.

[38]  B. Ostro,et al.  Air pollution and emergency room visits for asthma in Santa Clara County, California. , 1997, Environmental health perspectives.

[39]  F Forastiere,et al.  Air pollution and hospital admissions for respiratory conditions in Rome, Italy. , 2001, The European respiratory journal.

[40]  I. Hertz-Picciotto,et al.  Patterns and determinants of blood lead during pregnancy. , 2000, American journal of epidemiology.

[41]  P. Musto,et al.  Flow cytometric characterization of human umbilical cord blood lymphocytes: immunophenotypic features. , 1998, Haematologica.

[42]  K. Liang,et al.  Sudden infant death syndrome in relation to weather and optimetrically measured air pollution in Taiwan. , 1995, Pediatrics.

[43]  B. Turpin,et al.  Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the indoor and outdoor air of three cities in the U.S. , 2002, Environmental science & technology.

[44]  Y. E L E N,et al.  Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in the Indoor and Outdoor Air of Three Cities in the U , 2002 .

[45]  J. Samet,et al.  Nitrogen dioxide and respiratory illnesses in infants. , 1993, The American review of respiratory disease.

[46]  P. Preuss,et al.  Czech Air Quality Monitoring and Receptor Modeling Study , 1995 .

[47]  I. Romieu,et al.  Fine Particulate Matter and Wheezing Illnesses in the First Year of Life , 2004, Epidemiology.

[48]  Tracey J. Woodruff,et al.  Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) Air Pollution and Selected Causes of Postneonatal Infant Mortality in California , 2006, Environmental health perspectives.

[49]  M. Penna,et al.  Air pollution and infant mortality from pneumonia in the Rio de Janeiro metropolitan area. , 1991, Bulletin of the Pan American Health Organization.

[50]  I. Romieu,et al.  Association between Levels of Fine Particulate and Emergency Visits for Pneumonia and other Respiratory Illnesses among Children in Santiago, Chile. , 1999, Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association.

[51]  J. Hebel,et al.  Prenatal exposure to tobacco: I. Effects on physical growth at age three. , 1990, International journal of epidemiology.

[52]  R. Lew,et al.  Morbidity and mortality in children associated with the use of tobacco products by other people. , 1996, Pediatrics.

[53]  Tanja Pless-Mulloli,et al.  Does Particulate Air Pollution Contribute to Infant Death? A Systematic Review , 2004, Environmental health perspectives.

[54]  R. Sram,et al.  The impact of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and fine particles on pregnancy outcome. , 2000, Environmental health perspectives.

[55]  B. Brunekreef The effect of air pollution on infant mortality appears specific for respiratory causes in the postneonatal period. , 1999 .

[56]  J. Golding,et al.  Nitrogen dioxide, the oxides of nitrogen, and infants' health symptoms. ALSPAC Study Team. Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood. , 1997, Archives of environmental health.

[57]  I. Romieu,et al.  Association between levels of fine particulate and emergency visits for pneumonia and other respiratory illnesses among children in Santiago, Chile. , 1999, Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association.

[58]  D. Rubin,et al.  Statistical Analysis with Missing Data. , 1989 .

[59]  I. Hertz-Picciotto,et al.  Air Pollution and Distributions of Lymphocyte Immunophenotypes in Cord and Maternal Blood at Delivery , 2002, Epidemiology.

[60]  C. Hansen,et al.  Transplacental exposure to tobacco smoke in human-adduct formation in placenta and umbilical cord blood vessels. , 1992, Teratogenesis, carcinogenesis, and mutagenesis.

[61]  Nicole A. Lazar,et al.  Statistical Analysis With Missing Data , 2003, Technometrics.

[62]  B. Ostro,et al.  Air pollution and health effects: A study of medical visits among children in Santiago, Chile. , 1999, Environmental health perspectives.

[63]  Tony Fletcher,et al.  Respiratory diseases in children and outdoor air pollution in São Paulo, Brazil: a time series analysis , 2000, Occupational and environmental medicine.

[64]  M. Hernán,et al.  Causal knowledge as a prerequisite for confounding evaluation: an application to birth defects epidemiology. , 2002, American journal of epidemiology.