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2001 Progress Report: Assessing Human Exposures to Particulate and Gaseous Air Pollutants

EPA Grant Number: R827353C001
Subproject: this is subproject number 001 , established and managed by the Center Director under grant R827353
(EPA does not fund or establish subprojects; EPA awards and manages the overall grant for this center).

Center: EPA Harvard Center for Ambient Particle Health Effects
Center Director: Koutrakis, Petros
Title: Assessing Human Exposures to Particulate and Gaseous Air Pollutants
Investigators: Koutrakis, Petros
Current Investigators: Koutrakis, Petros , Brown, Kathleen Ward , Sarnat, Jeremy , Suh, Helen H.
Institution: Harvard University
EPA Project Officer: Stacey Katz/Gail Robarge,
Project Period: June 1, 1999 through May 31, 2005 (Extended to May 31, 2006)
Project Period Covered by this Report: June 1, 2001 through May 31, 2002
Project Amount: Refer to main center abstract for funding details.
RFA: Airborne Particulate Matter (PM) Centers (1999)
Research Category: Particulate Matter

Description:

Objective:

The overall theme is to improve our ability to characterize air pollutant exposures for health effects studies. This project is one of three research studies proposed under Theme I: Assessing Particle Exposures for Health Effects Studies that were based on personal, indoor, and outdoor particulate and gas concentrations that were measured as part of our previous or current exposure studies. This project was intended to address Particulate Matter Research Topics 1, 5, and 7 identified by the National Research Council (NRC)-Outdoor Measures vs. Actual Exposures for Particles, Particle Components, and Gaseous Co-Pollutants. The objective of this research project is to collect exposure data for indoor, outdoor, and personal particle and gas samples for several sensitive subgroups and analyze the data for trends in sensitivity to air exposure.

Progress Summary:

Currently, we are completing our analysis of data collected in a series of exposure studies that were conducted in several cities located throughout the United States (Boston, MA; Baltimore, MD; Atlanta, GA; Los Angeles, CA; Steubenville, OH). As part of these studies, we have collected several thousand simultaneous outdoor, indoor, and personal particle and gas samples for several potentially sensitive subgroups, including senior citizens, children, and individuals with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or recent myocardial infarctions (MI). (Data collection for the Atlanta and Steubenville studies was co-funded by the Center, while data collection for the remaining studies was supported by other agencies and EPA (under a separate cooperative agreement).

We are analyzing data from these studies to investigate: (1) the contribution of particles of outdoor and indoor origin to personal PM2.5 exposures; (2) the potential for confounding by gaseous pollutants to affect epidemiological study results; and (3) the ability of particles to penetrate from outdoor to indoor environments. We currently are completing our analyses of data from Boston, Atlanta, and Los Angeles, and we are beginning to examine data from Steubenville, OH.

The most recent of these studies investigates the ability of sulfur to act as a tracer of outdoor fine particles. Our results suggest that sulfur compounds are primarily of outdoor origin and behave in a manner that was representative of total PM2.5 in Boston, MA. Thus these findings provide evidence that sulfur can be used as a tracer of outdoor PM2.5. The size composition of outdoor PM2.5 was shown to be an important characteristic affecting the robustness of sulfur-based estimation methods. Sulfur was more representative of particles in the 0.06 and 0.5 µm size range as compared to particles in smaller and larger size intervals. The sulfur-tracer method produced consistently accurate results for 0.06 to 0.5 µm particles, however, this method significantly over-predicted indoor concentration of particles less than 0.06 and greater than 0.7 µm in size. These results reflect higher effective penetration efficiencies for sulfur as compared to particles in these smallest and largest size intervals.

Future Activities:

In the coming year, we will continue to analyze the exposure data for trends in sensitivity to air exposure.


Journal Articles on this Report: 3 Displayed | Download in RIS Format

Other subproject views: All 6 publications 6 publications in selected types All 6 journal articles
Other center views: All 149 publications 149 publications in selected types All 148 journal articles

Type Citation Sub Project Document Sources
Journal Article Sarnat JA, Koutrakis P, Suh HH. Assessing the relationship between personal particulate and gaseous exposures of senior citizens living in Baltimore, MD. Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association 2000;50(7):1184-1198. R827353 (Final)
R827353C001 (2000)
R827353C001 (2001)
R827353C001 (2002)
R827353C001 (2003)
R827353C001 (2004)
R827353C001 (Final)
  • Abstract from PubMed
  • Journal Article Sarnat JA, Schwartz J, Catalano PJ, Suh HH. Gaseous pollutants in particulate matter epidemiology: confounders or surrogates? Environmental Health Perspectives 2001;109(10):1053-1061. R827353 (Final)
    R827353C001 (2001)
    R827353C001 (2002)
    R827353C001 (Final)
  • Abstract from PubMed
  • Full-text: EHP Full Text
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  • Other: EHP PDF
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  • Journal Article Sarnat JA, Long CM, Koutrakis P, Coull BA, Schwartz J, Suh HH. Using sulfur as a tracer of outdoor fine particulate matter. Environmental Science & Technology 2002;36(24):5305-5314. R827353 (Final)
    R827353C001 (2001)
    R827353C001 (Final)
  • Abstract from PubMed
  • Supplemental Keywords:

    exposure, particulate, particulate matter, PM, gaseous, air, pollutant, epidemiological, outdoor, indoor. , Air, Scientific Discipline, Health, RFA, Air Pollution Monitoring, Molecular Biology/Genetics, Toxicology, Biology, indoor air, Risk Assessments, Epidemiology, air toxics, Atmospheric Sciences, Environmental Microbiology, particulate matter, Environmental Chemistry, Environmental Monitoring, ambient measurement methods, cardiopulmonary, exposure assessment, risk assessment, exposure and effects, COPD, ambient air quality, cardiovascular disease, chronic effects, indoor air quality, inhalation, developmental effects, epidemelogy, respiratory disease, inhalation toxicology, air quality, ambient air, indoor exposure, measurement methods, cardiopulmonary responses, human health risk, monitoring, genetic susceptibility, particle exposure, air pollutants, human health effects, particulates, respiratory, sensitive populations, ambient particle health effects, air pollution, ambient monitoring, children, inhaled, lung, ambient air monitoring, chemical exposure, dosimetry, exposure, pulmonary, human health, human exposure, particle size, PM, pulmonary disease
    Relevant Websites:

    http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/epacenter exit EPA

    Progress and Final Reports:
    1999 Progress Report
    2000 Progress Report
    Original Abstract
    2002 Progress Report
    2003 Progress Report
    2004 Progress Report
    Final Report


    Main Center Abstract and Reports:
    R827353    EPA Harvard Center for Ambient Particle Health Effects

    Subprojects under this Center: (EPA does not fund or establish subprojects; EPA awards and manages the overall grant for this center).
    R827353C001 Assessing Human Exposures to Particulate and Gaseous Air Pollutants
    R827353C002 Quantifying Exposure Error and its Effect on Epidemiological Studies
    R827353C003 St. Louis Bus, Steubenville and Atlanta Studies
    R827353C004 Examining Conditions That Predispose Towards Acute Adverse Effects of Particulate Exposures
    R827353C005 Assessing Life-Shortening Associated with Exposure to Particulate Matter
    R827353C006 Investigating Chronic Effects of Exposure to Particulate Matter
    R827353C007 Determining the Effects of Particle Characteristics on Respiratory Health of Children
    R827353C008 Differentiating the Roles of Particle Size, Particle Composition, and Gaseous Co-Pollutants on Cardiac Ischemia
    R827353C009 Assessing Deposition of Ambient Particles in the Lung
    R827353C010 Relating Changes in Blood Viscosity, Other Clotting Parameters, Heart Rate, and Heart Rate Variability to Particulate and Criteria Gas Exposures
    R827353C011 Studies of Oxidant Mechanisms
    R827353C012 Modeling Relationships Between Mobile Source Particle Emissions and Population Exposures
    R827353C013 Toxicological Evaluation of Realistic Emissions of Source Aerosols (TERESA) Study
    R827353C014 Identifying the Physical and Chemical Properties of Particulate Matter Responsible for the Observed Adverse Health Effects
    R827353C015 Research Coordination Core
    R827353C016 Analytical and Facilities Core
    R827353C017 Technology Development and Transfer Core

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    The perspectives, information and conclusions conveyed in research project abstracts, progress reports, final reports, journal abstracts and journal publications convey the viewpoints of the principal investigator and may not represent the views and policies of ORD and EPA. Conclusions drawn by the principal investigators have not been reviewed by the Agency.


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